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11-NovemberPAGE EOUR THE DAVIE HMViil), MOCKPVILLK N C. OCTOPBR 29 1968 This ProfeMor Need* Your Old Whale Hairs, PleaieAny old whale hairs around th« house? Qr. Leon A. Hausman, Rut* sera University professor, would like to have them.Dr. Hausman, orintholostst and national]y>famcd hair rescorcher. confessed to Watson DaWs on CBS’ "Adventures in Science'* program recently that his hair collection Is •fresh out” of whale hairs. It seems that they are extremely bard to find, even on a whale.The whales, even the 100>ton variety, have only a few. That’s part of the problem. There are Just a few around the huge mam« mal’s mouth. Then too, there Is the difficulty of collecting them. ^Having so few, whales won’t peacefully stand around while their hair is pulled—that is, if you could get that close.Whale hairs occupied only part of Mr.,Davis* Interview with the noted Rutgers University scientist. Dr. Hausman's long-standing pre« occupation with hair began when he was assigned to compare mi* croscopically his own hair with that of a 6,000*year*old Egyptian mummy as the subject* oC his Cor­nell doctoral thesis.Since then his reputation In the field has taken him into law courts as an export witness in cases rang> ing from hlt>and>run driving to murder. He has established In court whether a fur coat was a genuine $7,500 mink or a $1,200 dyed imitation.He has worked with archeologlsfs who found Indian robes in Arizona caves. Whether they were made of hairs of bison or of sheep could solve the date of their manufac* ture since sheep were known to have been introduced by the Span* Ish at a certain date. Plants, Like People, May Store Up too Much Fat Plants, like animals, store up large amounts of fat for the fu> ture. Acetic acid, a major con* stltuent of vinegar, plays an Im* portant part In the buildu p of this fat supply in peanuts, according to recent experiments by P. K. Stumpf, division of plant blochem* Istry, and Guggenheim Fellow El­don H. Newcomb. University of California college of agriculture.Acetic- acid molcculcs, two*car* bon units, are converted into long­er fatty acid chains. Fatty acids, in turn, are built Into 16* to'18*car* bon fat molcculcs.Immature, living peanut seeds were sliced Into thin sections and bathed in different radioactive compounds for several iiours. The radioactive compounds chosen were various carbon-containing materials that might be converted into fatty acids. 't By measuring ihc radioactive fatty acids formed In the seed sec­tions, it was found that acetic acid contributed most to fatly acid for* mation. Such sugars as glucose and fructose form the fatty acid pre­cursor—acetic acid—which is then converted Into the fatty acid chains.These experiments show that both plants and animals use much the same methods of building up fats from smaller carbon mole­ cules. She Will Cry Probably only one woman In Australia will shod tears when the atom bomb experts blast the Monte Bello Islands from their coral beds some time this year. She’s Mrs.J. C. Taylor of Parkerville, West­ern Australia. To Mrs. Taylor, the supposedly bare, bleak Island group is a tropical paradise of col­orful coral reefs, alive with fish, turtles and tasty oysters, “I’m not a nrst*ciass flsher-woman.” Mrs. Taylor maintains, "but on Monle Bello you just can’t help catching them. You toss In your line and pull out a schnappor.” Mrs. Tay. lor’5 visits to Monte Bello usually Involved anchoring off-shore In luggers or fishing vessels, as the Islands have no fresh water. Ono time, however, the Parkerville woman and her family did camp out on the now famous atolls. “Crawling turtles and rats woke us up,” she recounts, "and we end*. ed up sleeping with our boots on.” The Monte Bello Islands, off the north*west coast of Western Aus* tralla, have been named by the Australian and BriUsh Govern­ments as the site of atomic expe­riments to be carried out later this y « » r . ______________________ How You Sec It you are to see an object, tight from that object must enter your eyes.'Some things are luminous, or llgbt*glving In themselves—the sun, the stars, a lighted electric lamp, a firefly, a bonfire, for ex* ample. But most objects simply re* fleet light from the sun or some other luminous body. When you see the moon you'are really seeing re­flected sunlight. A book, a chair, a building arc visibl. by virtue of the light which tails upon them and Is bent back to your eyes. | False Teeth for Baby A group of dental researchers, working on the theory that many dental problems can be traced to defects starling In babyTeelh,-T»re- diets there will be more false teeth, bridges, ^crowns, fillings and even plates for babies. The scien* i tists say that growing mouths.c'an ; become deformed when lost infant teeth aren’t replaced with false wi'esi-Sfacty per cent rf^adult-tooth * deformtfes result from 'hf* earJy neglect, they estimate. Dr. Foreman u .u b , Power for Need . Lesson for November 2, 1953 npHEIlE %re various kinds of A power, and this lesson is not about most of them. For example there Is mechanical power, and atomic power, and electrical pow­er, There Is armed force ex­erted by a na­tion, and there are all the forces of nature. We are not concerned di­rectly with any of these. We will think not of one particular kind of power, but of any kind which is per­sonally controlled and used, the power that every one has. Prac­tically all human beings exert some kind of power. It may be the power of influence; it may be based on money j It may be pollt* ical or social; It may be power to command, such as if held by sea- captains and labor bosses and of­fice managers. The reader Is in­vited to reflect on his own situa­tion and concentrate his mind on whatever power, be it ever so small, which he hUnseU exercises or can exercise when he pleases. Very few persons are complete Zeros. w ♦ • • Purposes oC P rayer Is it wrong, that is to say. un- Christian. to wish to be strong? Of course not. There Is surely no vir­tue in weakness. To wish to bo weak, or to be content with weak­ness, la no sign of a Christian. It depends on the motive behind the desire. Now power can be had. or wished for, for various reasons, bad and good. Some people like to be strong Just to show off. A boy goes around bending his arm nnd showing the other boys what big muscles he has. just bragging. That may be all right for a boy (though the boaster Is pretty sure to bMhrown sooner or later). But when a grown man does the same tiiing he is just being childish. However, this Is harmless com­pared with another common mis* use of power; that is. using it to build op more power. We can sec It In politicians who hold on to important^ positions even though they could be more useful In pri* vate life and though a dozen other men could do their job quite well as they can. We can see it even In the church, where some men like to get on and stay on impor­tant committees because then they can “crack the whip" over their brethren. Worst and meanest of all mis-uses of power Is using it to burl and crush others. We can see examples I of this on the na* , tional scale, all through history. It. scales all the way down to the blackmailer, who uses some bit of scandal that he knows about to ruin the lives of perhaps much bet­ter men.-• • • Jesus and H is Power Now Christians have always be­fore them an example of tremend­ous power, gently and generously used. Readers of this column will be divided into two classes. Some will take the stories of Jesus' mira­cles quite litterally. Others will suppose that some of these stories may have been exaggerations of Joyal memory. Let those who aroy skeptical about the miracle-stories give a thought to this: Even grant­ ing. for the sake of the argument, that every one of these miracle- stories is a ••made-up’’ one; they surely would never have been in­vented about a weak man; and they never would have been told about a selfish one. The historians who are most full of doubts about Jesus agree and admit that he was a man of extraordinary power. And even If you thought <as this writer docs not) that most of the tales of Jesus were wonder-tales and no more, the fact remains thut these tales, every one of them, shows a Jesus who never ^ses power to show off, never uses It “just because,’’ and seven times never uses It to hurt any one. Power fo r Need Jesus gives us the right Chris­tian line. “As he Is. so are we in this world,” said one of his friends.. Power Is given us. as all the gifts of life are, for use In the name of God and the help of man. What- ever power we have, we possess as stewards. It makes no differ­ ence how obscure we may be. every one of us has some degree of power, of some kind. It may be a mother with her.chl^rcn, a teach­er with his pupil's, :>n older child with younger children, a business man with many employees, a Judge on the bench or an officer In a 4-H club—if our decisions affect the Ufe of even one other,person, then God will ask us: Did your power hurt others, or help? 0. Kept10. One who tunea12. Metal13. Ripe11. Work out, as a planIG. Mother 17. Put In a niche 10. Layers (Gcol.)22. Type of short tale23. Sesames (var.)24. Marble26. Sen eagle27. Semblances 23. Originaldraft of a (louument31. Hebrew letter32. Kaiivcs of ancient Ihcrla36. ?4uslcal studies as. Pl.’ice 59. Ren-.ovcs (mint.)40. Concise41.Foi>42. Pause l.Gaiuo of rhance r. r.tvcr <Enpr)3. Esrhange opi*r.ntor 25. Northern division of Palestine 27. Frosta 29. Helped over dlfncultUa 13. Transparent 30. Fat silicate 33. Mannen 15. Soaks. 34. Coay retreat asllax 33. Prosecute 18. Dross Judicially JT. Curved knlfa <Eak.) 4aTyeasurer (•W>r,) Please Help Us! Notice to Creditors \Vc hnve l<»si the nnmc.s of a of i»iir solJicr btw-s xx'ho'' pictures sTpcar ticlow. If vmi rc c Bniic one or more, please m’- vlse II', siiul we will appreciate ii very much: Having qualified as Exccutor of the estate of F. H . Bahnson, ’ de­ ceased, noiicc is hereby given to all person.s holding claims against said estate to present the same, properlv verified, lo the^ undcr- siened at Coolcemee, N C ., on or before the 30ih day of September 1953, oi this notice w ill be plead In bar of recovery. A ll persons indebted to said estate w ill please n*ake prompt serilenK'nt This 0th dav of Septim bir, 1552. C H A S . V. H A H N < 0 .n .Exr. of R H ^i1hn^o », Decs^d. mer S E E U S r O - i Self - Propdled Corn Pickers, Drills, Used or new, o>’ for anything you need in Farm Machinery. V/e can save you m o n e y hendrix & W ard WINSTON--ALEM HIGHWAY MUCH THEAPER An upstate Nciv York vcterlnolT got a call from a local store. A farm* er there wanted him to look at a sick cow. The doctor picked up the farmer and drove over winding country roads. As they pulled up lo the farmer’s house, the farmer opened the car door and said: ''You can let me out huro, Doc. I haven’t got a sick cow. You see, you charge only S3 (or a visit when a taxi would cost me s-V* F o r C o u n t y C o m m i s s i o n e r I wish to announce to the voters of Davie County that I am a Can­ didate for County Commissioner on the Republican ticket, and would appreciate your support in the November f lection. If re elect­ ed to this important office I will render the best service possible to the entire citizenship of the county. 1 wish to thank all those who have givf«n me their support in the past. Your Friend R . P . M a r t i n (Political Advertisement) 0 o Yio ' • I'.o To c rd'j NtW MONEY MM VOUR OLD m iN M U im m M r m m , PU S* h» On, « ■ «M A * t W A R T * • IN n v t i E v t P A m 0 T o T h e V o t e r s O f D a v i e | ' C o u n t y I Am A Candidate For Re-Election O n The Republiblican Ticket For Riegisi^r Of Deeds A nd will appreciate the votes of all th^ people of Davie County in the coming, election. If fe-elerted I will continue to.serye the people courteously* and friendly, in the future: as 1 have tried to do in the f ■' pa?t. Thanking You In Advance For Your Votes. Charles R. Vogler. (Political Advertisement) t o I ^ v i e C o u n t y • V 01ers 1 Wish To Announce To The Good Pedple Of Davie County That I Am Candidate For County Commissioner On the Republican Ticket. If re-elected I pledge myself to render jlhe best service possible. Your vote .will be very much appreciated. Your Friend , ■f' ) Clarence R. Carter (Political AdvertlsemenO , The Davie Record DAVIE OGUNTT’S OIiDEST N EW SPAPER-THE PA PER THE PEO PI,E REA D “HERE SHALL THE PP«4S, THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAINi UNAW ED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBHIBED BY C AIN “ VOLOMN L III.M O C K S V IL L E . N O R T H C A R O L tN A , W B D N E S D A Y N O V E M B E R s NEWS OF LONG AGO What Wat Hai nine In Da- vie Before pArking Melert And Abbreviated Skirls. (Dnvlp Record, O ct. a.s. *933). A «ort»ey A T . G ra o l m ade business trip to W in s to n ^ a le m on Thursday* B uck AlH son, w bo listens to the w ild waves at W llm inK to n. spent the w e ek e nd here w ith hom e folks T. P. B urton, of oear H ickory, was in tow n last w eek Rreetluft old frtends. . M rs A . T D aniel, M is. M . D . Pass and M iss M ary K a th ry n W al ker, spent F rid a y in W inslo n.S aU em shopplnK. M rs. Isaac Booe, o f IClnt;, and M iss A m y M oore, of P innacle, spent the w eek end in tow n w ith th e ir parenis M r. and M rs. \, F, Moore. M r. and M r i J . F . A dcock and little dauRhter, of C um nock, spent th e w eek'end In tow n w ith M r. and Mrs. W . L . C all, parents of M rs. A dcock. J . C Saurord and L P. C artner of this city, and N oah G rim es, of Cooleemee, spent T hursday In the G ate C ity, atteiif*lne a m eeting of th e N . C . D a iry Association. M rs. W , V S herrill and son C linton, left S a tu rd a y for Paynes- vllle, M ictf., to be at the bedside of her m other, w ho Is seiiously 11] and not expected to live. I ELlttle M iss H elen D obby Q le nu, daughter of D r. and M rs. T . L . G le nn, of th is city , underw ent operation for appvudicitis a t Davin H ospital. Statesville, last week, and Is ge tting alo ng nicely. Thieves entered th e store of A . J , Anderson, near C alahaln, one n ig h t last week and carried off se. veral pairs of overalls, some hosi* ery, sm oking tobacco and other ar. tid e s E n trance was m ade oy re m oving some p lank from the rear o f the b u iM ln ?. T he e n iliy | ties have not b?en apprehended. M r M elvin G illespie and Mii<s B va C all, o f Brevard, spent th f week-end in to w n, quests of Mr and M rs. W . L C all. M r. and M rs. R o y H o1lhous4't soent Sunday w ith th e ir daughter, M iss Helen Faye, w ho is a student at N . C . C . W , Greensboro. M r. and M rs. Francis A ngell and tw o sons, of P lains, Kansas, spent a short w hile in tow n last Wedne«> d ay w ith th e ir cou.sln. J. T . A n . gell. M r. A o ge ll and fam ily vlst. . ted relatives in Y a d k in and For­ syth connties w hile here. H i s grandfather m oved from Y ad k in county to K ansas about 50 years affn. H e has 535 acres In wheat th is year, w hich Is already up. In good crop years be m akes around 30 000 bushels of wheat. N ew s was received here Saturday ntorning te lling of the death of M iss M arietta C am pbell, w hich oc> curred at Her hom e at lerseyvlile, Illinois, on W ednesday, O ct. iit b . Miss C am pbell was about 85 years of.age, and leaves no im m ediate relatives. H e r parents, M r. and M rs G eorge C am pbell, left th e je richo section of D avie county '57 years ago and located in Illinol'i. N U M B E R 14 Be SHU Rev Wetter e. ruenhmir TnvioMvllle.N.C **BeStill and, and know that I am God.**— Psalm 46:10. G o out somewhere and meet w ith G od W here throngs o f people do not rrod; W here distance shuts away, the sound O f m an, m achines a n d things around; W her9 crystal steams reflect the sky W ith clouos that float so calm ly by W here masses grow along their brink A n d you m ay sU and deeply th ink . Be still and let G od speak to you. By eooling breeze and sparkling dew. W here flnwers bloom and birds sweet A w ay from noisv tow n and street But if yon cannot glee from these A nd find the quietness of the trees. T hen seek a room , where all alone, G od pours out blessings from H is throne. Be s till. O weary heart and m ind, O soul that tongs sweet peace 10 find; T ake God*s good W ord, and page by page. Read w hat bas m ade the saint and sage; T ben in the stillness of th e night A sk G od to m ake your pathw ay b lig h t. O r in the day w hen duties urge A sk G od to keep yon in the surge. Be still, for noisy Is the w orld, W hose business banners fly u n ­ furled; W hose modes of traval bid for speed W hose games excite, w hoie plea­ sures th rill. So traveler on the shores of tim e. Be still and seek G od ’s grace sublim e. Be^still and m edidate and pray A nd rest your nerves from day to d a y ; . R e n e w y o u r strength, refresh your soul. W here Itaffic's noise« do not rol’; W here G od ft*veals bis holy w ill For in the secret place of prayer G od alw ays meet;i H is children there IKE WINS f H'c Could Feel Another^s }/\foe I f we could feel another's woe T hat's sometimes hidden' in his breast, We*d he lets critical. I know , O f w hat we th in k should be bis best; A n d tben walk*^ u p and lake his baud A n d w ith a k ind and friendly sm ile Assure him we w ill help h im stand For G od and all th at is w orth w hile. W e’d orav for h im , whereas we talk O t w hat bis faults and failure are; O ne brother, N eelv Cainpb«H , W e 'd tellp^hlm w llli more (« ilh lo burled n the old fam ily graveyard ' w alk T he path' id heaven's goal afar; W e’d love h im m ore, yes, more and more. A n d m nnilesi G o d ’s spirit sweet; W e’d help h im in his trials sore T o lav h|s cares at Jesus* feet. near Je ric ho ., B W . T atu m . 58, prom loem Salisbury citizen, died at his hom e In th at city S aturday afternoon, follow ing an extended illness. F u oeralw rvlces were held Monday. *“ '»»®>'>er's woe ^ m oroloK. conducted by Rev A rcb T h .i no ore know s on earth bnt e ie e , p .r to r o t . |he First B a p ti,. O n r sym paihv lor bin. w ould grow , church, and th e bodv laid to rest whereas In C hestnut H ill cemetery, S u rv i. we nod. v ine are the w idow and several W e ’d weep (or h im deep In oor cbiidren. M r, T atu m was a native . , * , - i f b .» le couotv. a son of the lite ’ M r M d M rs. S am uel J . Tatum. strengthen b ln. in e V ry part of Jerusalem . Hie was very active A nd liless h im on life's rugged ID eburch w ork. racel ‘ ' • J G r e a t R e p u b l i c a n V i c t o r y W ith returns incomplete it appears that General Dwight Eisenhower has a majority of about 5,000,000, and will have about 450 electoral votes. ’ General Eisenhower and Richard Nixon, Rcpubllcnn candidates for President and Vice-President of the United States, are leading in 39 of the 48 states, with a po.ssible electo- rial vote of over 430. * It takes 266 electoral votes to elect. The solid Sou h is no longer in the bag as Virginia, Florida, Tennc s.see, Texas and Mnrvland seems 10 be safely Republican. General Ike rcciiived a maioritv of the votes in South Carolina on the Democrats far Ike ticket and the Republican tickct, but Stevenson got the 10 elec­ toral votes. It is thought that the Republicans w ill have a small mnjoritv in both Senate and House. North Carolina elected one Republican Congressman, Charles R' Jonas, of Lincolnton, who defeated his opponent, Hamilton Jones, by a majority of 12,000. Jonas carried all the six counties in the lOth Congressional D istrict. The Repitblican landslide was the biggest since Roosevelt defeat­ed A lf Lnndon in 1936. Republicans Win Davie County voters went to the polls yesterduy from early mom until dewey eve and cast the largest vote ever recorded in this county. W ith returns complete from a ll. 11 precincts, except for the Presi-; dentlal ticket in M ocksyille town* • ship, Eisenhower had a majority of 1403 votes over Stevenson. Ike's majority in this township, w ill be around 1,000 ic is choughtj The m ajority fo r the Republl- can County officers were as foU lowsj . Senate, Rcavis Republican 826; Representative, Smoot, Ropuhli can, 869 over J. 0 . Crawford; Re* gtster of Deeds Vogler, Republi can over W oodruff. 778; M artin, Carter an d Groce, Republican candidates for County Commiss ioners, defeated C all. Langston and Deadinon, hv majorities rang> ing from 808 to 892. Talbert, Re­ publican sun'eyor, had a majority of 836 over Bowles. In Florida U . S. Naval A ir Station, Pensa< cola, Fla., (FH TN C )—Attending a special five-months course in Ad­ vanced Training U n it is Marine Pfc. Eudeil Barnhardt, son of M r. and M rs. George Barnhardt of Route 2, Advance, N.' C. Do you read The R ecord ? Our County And Social Security Bv W . K . W hite. Manager. Old-age and survivors insur- ance now pays hiuher "dividends" because of the lu ly 1952 changes in the law. Congress has recognized that incicasing basic living costs caus­ ed a shrinkage in the dollar value of monthly social security benefits. Bv providing a more liberal for­ mula for calculating the benefits of those now retiring, they hove restored a measure of their poten^ tial purchasing power; by increas* ins the amounts paid ro those aU ready retired, they have made it- less likely that these persons w ill have to seek public aid in the fu' ture. A il fam ily members enti­ tled to share in old-age benefits or death benefits w ill generally re« ceive proportionate increases un­ der the new legislation. Self-employed persons who re­ tire before the end of this year al' so profit from the increases grant, ed bv Congress. They w ill be el­ igible for fu ll benefits even tho they retire this year. Persons having questions about these or related matters should consult the Winston-Salem, N . C office of the Social Security Ad­ m inistration, located in Room 437, Nissen Building. A representative of this ofiice w ill be in M ocksville again on Nov. 5th, at the court house, second floor, at 12:30 p. m ., and on the same date in Cooleemee, at the old Band H all, over Led­ ford's Store, at 11 a. m> From Iowa M r. and M rs. Floyd A llen, of Marshalltown, Iowa, are spending two weeks with relatives an d friends in Davie, Rowan, Yadkin counties, and in Richmond, V a., where they have a son living. M r. Allen is an old Davie County man, a son of the late M r. and Mrs. Gaston A llen. M r. Allen migrated to Iowa 42 years ago. He is in the catde business there, and has done well in his adopted stare, He comes back to the old home county rtgh. often. He and Mrs. Allen have many relatives and friends in Davie who are al­ ways glad to see them. Mrs. F. Foster M rs. Frances Hinkle Foster, 88, died Saturday a t a M ocksville after the election—Aged citizen nursing home. She had been CH wearing Panama hat around town Seen Along Main Street By Tbf Roinhler. nnnoou Big man disturbing the peace with loud haw-haws on Main street Ineberat-d citizen trying to find the door to local cafe— Preacher and manufacturer pass­ ing a cold chisel on Main street just before the election—D r. Gar­ land .Greene and Milton Call sit­ ting on bench In front of bus sta­ tion talking over the situatioti— Young man from Arizona leading big Irish setter into local cafe, but wasting no time in making a hasty retreat—B ill LeGrand get­ ting ready to leave town—Local barbers may have to raise prices on shaves since there are so many long faces since the election—Ben Boyles doing some early cam* paigning—Smoot Shelton listen­ ing to some campaign hot air— Farmer wanting to know why the price of cotton always drops be­ fore he gets his crop picked and sold—Housewife declaring that somebody was making too much profit on hen fruit—O rrell Etchi- son rambling up Main street— Lena Comatzer and Carrol M iller pausing in drug store for refresh­ ments—M rs. Lawrence Smith do­ ing some morning shopping—^Mrs. Ted Junker reading letter from absent daughter-Jim Thompson and Kimbrough Sheek discussing coming events - Congressman C . B. Deane doing some last minute handshaking—M rs. R . L . W alker shopping in dime shop—Charm­ ing young lady sitting in parked auto with ferocious looking bull dog^Mr. and M rs. Henry Taylor eating chicken and dumplings in l-)cal cafe—J. E . McDaniel wear­ ing Ike badge as large as a saucer —Miss Pearl Tatum doing some before Thanksgiving shopping— Prospective groom buying new suit just before wedding bells be­ gun to ring—M rs. B . 1. Smith do­ ing some dime store shopping— Lady declaring that she was glad that the election was over so she could become acquainted with her husband again - D . 1. Mandu modeling new fall coats- M rs. D . EL Stroud, |r.. having perculator repaired Ann Owings and Betty Messick walking up Main street diinking large coca-colas—M rs. Vera Dwiggins standing on Main street waiting for way to go home —Zanie Davis and , Durrls Jones running foot-race up Main street . ' Country lass declaring that the price of cotton would go down for a year. Bom Nov. 15, 1864, in Davie County, she was a daughter of George and Susan Dwi gins Hin* kic. She had been a resident of store, die North Cooleemee community for the past 35 years, and was a member of Cooleemee Methodist Church. Surviving are o n e half sister, Mrs. J . A . Boger of Greensboro, one half-brother, P . R . H inkle of Advance, Route 2; and several nieces and nephews. Funeral services were conduct ed at 2:30 p. m ., Cunday, at Cen ter Methodist Church by Rev. Hugh Jessup. Burial was in the churcli ccmetery. on frosty morning—I. H . Eidson getting warm morning hair cut— M rs. D . C . Kurfees reading news­ paper and drinking coca-cola In Shoaf Coal & Sand Co. We Can Supply Tiour Needs IN GO O D C O A L. SAN D arid B R IC K Call or Phone U s A t Any Time PH O N E 194 Fonnerlv Davie Brick &Coal Co' I The Gift Shop M RS. C H R ISTIN E W . D A N IEL ■} PAGE TWO TBE DAVIE BiSCORD. MOCKSVILLE, R. C . NOVBMBFR S. 1962 THE DAVIE RECORD. C . FR A N K STR O U D , E D ITO R , TEtEPHONE Entered atthePoBtoRieo in Mocks* ville. N- C .. BD Seeond-elruip Mall m atter. March 3,1908. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ONR YEAR. IN N. CAROLINA • $ L5H SIX MOrrTHS !N N. CAROLINA ' 75c. ONE YEAR, OUTStnE STATI- - «.no SIX MONTHS. OUTRIDE STATE • $1.00 "IF MY PEOPLE WHICH ARE CAUED BY MY NAME. SHAU HUMBLE THEMSaVES, AND PRAY. AND SEEK MY FACE. AND TURN AWAY FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THEN WIU I HEAR FROM HEAVEN, AND WIU FORGIVF m ift SMS. AND WIU HEAl THEIR UND.".. 2 CHRON. 7 |1 ^________ W e have often wondered whv the pricc of cotton always dropped ju st when the farmers were har­ vesting their crops. It scnerallv starts goinc up again after our farmers have sold the bulk of their crops. The Chamelion looks a litde flabbergasred since the votes >\erc counted. In spite of all his strcnu, ous efforts to carry Davie County for A dlai, General Ike got an overwhelming majority in good old Davie. Since the election is over tht> next thinR facing us is where wv arc going to uet the cash to buy our Thanksgiving turkey A farm­ er friend has already given us a 50- pound pumpkin, so we can at least have pumpkin pie if we can ralsi* the cash to get the crusrs, lard and sweetening. I f we have said or done any­ thing to offend any voter in Davie • County during the recent cam­ paign, we here and now offer our profuse apologies. We never say anything so mean but what we can take it back, especially if the fellow we offended is larger than this scribe. max of the evening’s activities was U O c O r r ill r a r a a e the crowning of thequecn, Bettv An event of interest to the pco- 1° Sophomore, and the pie of Mockavllle and Davie Coun- Jol’ ->nv Braswell, Freshman, tv was the annual Hallowe’en pa-i “ m ival was a big success rade on Friday afternoon at 2:30 ="'‘* ” '"S-- sum was reallied. o’clock, whicli began at the h ish , L FI * school building, circled the square I t T U I l R U T I V C T S and returned to the school. The .. . , , . . . , , children from the primary and “ ^n intoxica ed driver lacks courcesy—one of the most impor- grammar grades in their manv and ________________________ varied costumes presented a very colorful scene. They were fol lowed by the eighth grade float, with king and queen Toe Brown and Ruth Green, bearing the sign, “Just married.** Th is float was pulled by a lawn mower. Then came a number of floats, feat* uring the high school candidates for king .md queen. The Wheel of Fortune float of the Senior class featured candidates Lennie Brown and Farrell Cohen This was followed bv an attractive pa­ triotic float, featuring Jane Rob> Inson as the Stutue of Liberty and Manv of our subscribers have let their subscriptions expire. Wc would appreciate it very much if those who a e due us on subscrtn* tion wuuld call or send us their renewals. We have a supply of 1953 Blum's Almanacs—tlie old JiabJe—wh ch wc .ire givtng to all who subscribe or renew their sub­ scriptions rn The Reci'rd. Call and get your copy when you come to town. Hundreds of new homeii have been built in Davie County dur* ing the past two or three vears- and many new stores and busi­ ness houses have also been built in and around M ocksviile. What our town needs today are more manufacturing plants to give em­ ployment to our our vounR people who have finished high school and college. We cannot keep our young people in Mocksviile and Davie without they can secure em plovment. Let’s get busy and try to secure some new manufactur- ing pla.its. COULDN'T TELL Six pollUeal job holders were eairying tbd body of a man who had been killed into an under­taker’s establishment. The under­taker was very much annoyed. •'Why," he asked, “didn't you brine this man's body here at three o’clock, as you promised? It's now after six.""Sorry,” replied Ihe leader, "but yr'9 bad to wait until the five o'clock whistle blew to find out which one ot the men was dead." SHE SAID A MODTHFITL Mother (who has gruesl at dtaner)—"Cindy, don’t talk with your mouth fuU.”Cliidy—"But, mummy, what am J <0 do? When t talk with my mouth empty, you always My, 'Cindyi go en with your tant factors in the prevention of accidcnts,** Safety RcDresentativc J . R . Waters, of the Moter Vehic» les Highway Safety Division said today in a plea for safety by Davie County motorists. *‘The person who has a few drinks under his belt is in ho po* sition to judge his own driving flbilitics,** Waters said. “ W ith some people there’s even an irra* tional sort of pride In their at* tempts to drive after d ri. king. They admit that their speech is blurred and their sight fuzty, but that their driving is dangerous— n I f , t t o never. They may even b.: so farRobert Latham as Uncle Sam, . l u /__n.u, , , . , J . , gone that they harbor the foolish Juniorkm g and queen candidates. The Freshman class float depict' ed a South Sea Island scene with candidates nutt\’ Jo Foster and fohnny Etchison as the center of attraction. The Sophomore class float presented Cinderella (Lena notion that they had better drive because they arc in no condition to walk.** "Common sense and good man­ ners should tell the drinking dri­ ver to stay off the highway; they not only endanger their own livesGray Cornati.r) leavmg the ball „,h er motor- on thestrokeof 12, the Pnncc; Uohnny Braswell) followmg with -Remember, highway her slipper. 'courtesy is foraotten by the drun-Next m the parade was an at- „ bvItheFHA and FFA bearing Queen losephme ..Courtesy is a major factor in M iller and Kinu Charles Culler. ^i^^way acciden s. The also runners-up Ann Kurfees and sober, courtesy d-iver, by driving Evcrettecain. ™ s was followed alert by the Cub Scout float. Last but can assure not least, was the float bearing re- „„id e n t free driv presentatiyes of Student Council, i, concluded Waters. On Friday evening at the annu ,, ,al Hallowe'en Carnival, best cos- We waited this year until the tume winners in the parade were vo»es were counted before making announced, prizes being awarded up oor first page. Four years ago to P. C Grubbs, Jr., and lohnny wc had to junk our Dewey and Hendon. Tlie Junior class float Warren pictures and tear down won first prize and the Sophomore our Republican Landslide type, class float won second. The cli- “A burned child dreads the fire.** THE ELECTION iS O V E R BUT H u p p F e e d M i l l s Are Stili Prepared To Do Your C u s t o m G r i n d i n g And Supply Your Need.' In All Kinds Feeds W E C A R R Y A BIG STOCK O F Dairy and Chicken Feed Dairy and Hog Feed W e Can Give You Quick SERVICE When In Need O f Anything In The Feed Line W e W ill Be Glad To Serve You. M A K E O U R M ILL Y O U R HEADQUARTERS W H EN Y O U CO M E TO T O W N W e Are Always Gia I To See "You] H u p p F e e d M i l l s Phone 95 Wilkesboro Street! N O W O P E N H i l l t o p S u p e r M a r k e t Just North O f Mocksviile O n Winston-Salem Highway A Full Line Of Fresh And Cured Meals, Groceries, Fruits And Vegetables. ATLANTIC GAS AND OIL New Store New Goods CA LL A N D LO O K O V E R O U R STORE. Plenty Of Parking Space. H I L L T O P S U P E R M A R K E T T. S. HENDRIX, Proprietor W IN STO N -SALEM H IG H W A Y Serving Our Friends Since 1902 with dependable quality PIANOS ami ORGANS • HAMMOND ORGANS • GBAND PUNOS • SPINET PIANOS • USED PIANOS Regardless of the price yon pay, you get Ihe B EST VALUE in a piano al lease G. Bowen Music Co.—In. busi­ ness since 1902. EASY PAYMENT PLAN J E S S E C . B O W EN M U SIC C O . 217 WEST FIFTH ST. *............................................................ WINSTON-SALEM. N. C. W e H a v e M o v ie d T o O u r N E W S T O R E B U I L D I N G ON SAUSBURY STREET Next Door To The Goodrich Store W e Have Mbre Room, Together W ith A Modern Up-To-Date Building W ith Three Entrances , PLENTY OF PA RK IN G SPACE W e Are Prepared To Serve You Better In Our New Location. ^ * CALL AND LOOK OVER OUR Big Stock Of Meats, Fruits, Vegetables, ; Heavy And, Fancy Groceries IT IS A PLEASURE T O SERVE YOU. Bring Your Friends Along. A L L I S O N J O H N S O N C O . ■Salisbury Street Phone 11?1 Mocksviile, N. C. in is DAVIE RkX)RD, HOCKSViLLB. N. C. N0VGVIBE1R 6. 19K PAGE Tim u THE DAVIE RECORD. OldMt Paper In The County No Liquor, Wine, Beer Adt N E W S A R O U N D T O W N . . A . D . ^ tledge, of Sutesville, WjS a M ocksviile visitor one dav last week. M rs. Frank Poteat, o f Cool Springs, spent Tuesday in town w ith friends. M rs. Rov W alker, of Winston- Salem, was in town Thursday on business. M rs. Conrad Snow, of Hous- tonville, was the week-end guest of M iss Jessie Libby Stroud. M r. and M rs. D . R . Owen of E l Paso, Texas, are visiilng their father. R . A . Coon, of Route 3. Miss Lillie Meroney has return­ ed from a visit with her sislter M rs. John Hodge, at Lexington. M rs. J . A . Sm ith, of M t A iry, spent last week in town the guest o f her daughter, M rs. C . I . W il son and M n W l.son. M r. and M rs. Vemoon Row land and small daughter Jane, of Spartanburg, S. C ., were Thurs­ day guests of M r. and M rs. Geo, W . Rowland. M r. and M rs. Sam F . Btnklev, Jr., and childten, of Knoxville, Tenn., spent several days the past week w ith M r. Binkley’s father, S . F . Binkley. M rs. B . 1. Hasselman, of Mi.. Vernon, N . Y ., was the recent guest of her daughter, M rs. I- T . Hunter and M r. Hunter, on W ilk' esboro street. Thursday morning the tempera ture dropped to a low of 24 de­ grees, the lowest registered this falL There was a heavy frost with plenty o f ice. M arvin Waters who has been a patient at Davis Hospital, States­ ville , for the past month, was able to return home last Tuesday and is getting along nicely, his fnends w ill be glad to learn. The many friends of Lonnie Wagoner, who has been a patient at Davis Hospital, Statesville, for the past five weeks, w ill' be glad to learn that he is much better, and is now allowed to receive company. Ransome York, Jr., won another hig trophy at the Danville. Va., £ilt-grounds on Oct. 26th. This is the second trophy won by Ran, some this fialL He has won both 1952 championship races. Con gratulations, Ransome. Bryan S d l went to D anville, Va., Friday to attend the funeral and burial of his sister, M rs. A . F. Gridiam , who died at her home in diat city Thursday. Funeral services took place Friday after­ noon at 3 o’clock in Danville. A house two miles southwest •of Catawba, owned by Lambert M urray, of Mocksviile, was totally dntroyed by fire, together with all contents, late Thursday after, noon. The house vras occupied by the fam ily of J . C . Setzer. M r. M ilirav carried $3,500 insurance 6ii;lh e house. Rev. and M rs. Tommie Lans fo r i of Charlotte, are the proud parents of a son, who arrived at Mercy Hospital, Charlotte, Wed nesday, Oct. 29th. M rs. Lansford is a granddaughter of M r. and M rs. A rthur Daniel, of this city. She was the former Miss Ann Marie DanieL George W . M artin, son of D r. and M rs. Lester P. M artin, has opened his law office on the se cohd floor of the Anderson build ing on the square, next door to D r. R . P . Anderson’s dental par­ lo r. The Record is glad to wel. come this young legal light to the b u t town in North Carolina. We wish him much success in the old home town, Pvt. Silas'F. W hitaker, son of M r. and M rs. Fletcher- W hitaker, M ocksviile, N . C , has arrived at Camp Rucker, A la., to undergo his initial infantry training. In ­ ducted Oct. 13th, and processed at Fort Jackson, S . C ,; he w ill re­ ceive basic training from the 47th "V iking" Infantry Division here. The new soldier w ill undertake a rigorous schedule Incorporating a wide-range o f m ilitary subjects from m ilitary courtesy and field sanitation to machine gun and bazooka fam iliaritation. Bazaar-Supper The ladies of Liberty Methodist Church w ill sponsor a bazaar and supper on Saturday, Nov. 8th, be­ ginning at 5 p. m. Everyone is invited to attend. “Shooting Stars” Wm ADS PAY. IKoman of Year Raleish, Oct. 30—M rs. George Apperson* of Jerusalem, was a* waided the ** Woman of the Year” plaque Wednesday night. The a* ward was presented by Miss Sal* lie Hill« of Birmingham) Alabama, woman's editor of the Progressive Farmer, which selected the Davie Countv wonian. Mrs. Apperson is a farm worn* an and is president of the Coun­ try Women's Council of the U ni­ ted States, which closed its 1952 nadonal meeting here yesterday. Beer Gone A ll nine of the beer saloons in Davie County went out of busi* ness last Wednesday. Beer on handwas hauled out of the coun­ ty. Those whohave been drinking this beverage w ill have to go to some of the. wet counties to get their supply in the future. In ]\few Store Allison-Johnson Co., opened their new store on Salisbury street Thursday. ' This is the largest, most modern and up-tO'date gro« eery in and market in Davie County. The store is well heated and lighted, with ample parking space and no parking meters. The enthusiastic caist is at work daily on the forthcoming produc­ tion of “Shooting Stars,*’ the elab­ orate musical show which* the Ju­ nior Chamber of Commerce w ill sponsor in this city on Friday and Saturday, Nov. 7-8, at the high: school auditorium for die benefit of the erecdon of permanent street signs to be presented to the town of Mocksviile by the Jaycees. Some of the most talented peo­ ple in the cfommunity are appear­ ing in the show, which features singing, dancing and comedy acts. Tickets are on sale now and may be purchased from any Jaycee member, or at Hall Drug Store, where they mav also be reserved in advance free of charge. There is always something to be thankful for. It w ill be two vears before the next election rolls a- round. The store carries a large stock of meats, frozen foods, groceries, fruits and vegetables. The own ers are extending a cordial invita­ tion to all their former customers and the public generally, to visit their home at any time and look over their new stock and fixtures. I f i^s something good to eat you are*looking for, they, can satisfy your wants. Miss Kate Brown Miss Kate Brown, 88, a life­ long resident o f Davie Cbunty, died at the home of Miss Lillie Meroney on Salisbury street at 10 o’clock Friday morning, following an illness of only a few hours. Miss Brown had spent most of her life In M ocksviile. Surviving are the following ne phews and nieces: Miss Lillie Meroney, of this citvj M rs. John Hodges, of Lexington; Miss Daisy Turner and Brown Turner, oi Route 4, and R . S. Meroney, of Asheville. Funeral services were held at 3 p. m. Saturday at the First Me­ thodist Church, with her pastor. Rev. W . Q . Grigg officiating, and the body laid to rest in Joppa cemeteiy. “ Miss Kate,” as she known bv a host of friends, w ill be missed in this city, where she lived since :ly childhood. Mrs. M. Roadman M rs. M ollie Roadman, former resident o f Davie County, died at S t Petersburg, Fla., Thursday af­ ter a long illness. Funeral services were held at 11 a. m, Saturday at Center' Metho­ dist Church, and the body laid to rest in the chinch cemetery. M rs. Roadman was bom in Da­ vie Qounty. a daughter of M r. and M rs. Perry Casey. She has lived in Pennsylvania and Florida for manv vears. Only survivors are nieces and nephews. Princess Theatre TH U R S DAY^St K llD A Y "B A T T LE A T A PA CH E PASS” W ith John Lund &. Jeff Chandler. In Technicolor News & Cartoon SA TU R D A Y *TARZAN 'S SA V A G E FU R Y ” W ith Lex Barker & Dorothy H art Serial Cartoon M O N DAY fit TU ESD A Y '•STO RY O F RO BIN HO O D" W ith Richard Todd &. Joan Rice. In Technicolor News and Cartoon W ED N ESD AY “ RED P LA N ET M A R S '' W ith Peter Graves &. Andrea King. Comedy & Cartoon DAVIE COUNTY'S BIGGEST SHOW VALUE ‘ ADM 12c ond 35c FO R S A LE — Barbe W ire & Galvanized Roofing.Milier^Evans Hardware Co. FD R SA LE—l pqir good rabbit dof^, guaranteed. 1 Redbone op' posum dog. See Jack Felmster, Harmony> N . C ., R . 2. STR A Y ED .—Jersey cow, de­homed, white spot on forehead. If found, please notify S. S. SH O RT. Phone 189. Mocksviile. Anyone wishing to work as a nurse's aid. between ages of 18-45, white, appiv at Mocksviile Nursing Home for interview. T H E "f u l l e r SH AM PbO BRU SH —Has 106 Plastic Fingers to massage the scalp. W rite FU LLE R BRU SH M AN, Box 132 J. M. Haneline J . Moody Haneline, 50, died Wedneeday evening a t 9:30 o'clock at the home of his son Moody, in South M ocksviile. He had been ill for the past year. Funeral services were held at the home at 2 p. m .| Friday, with Rev. A . J . Cox officiating, and the body laid to rest in Union Chapel Methodist Church cemetery. Surviving are two sons, J. M. Jr.. | and C E . Haneline, of Mocksviile; three daughters, Mrs. B ill Bram- ham, of'M ocksviile; Mrs. Mariene Reeves, and Miss Barbara Ann Haneline, of Greenville. S. C ., two brothers, Harrison and Row* land Haneline o f M ocksviile, three sisters, M rs. W alter C all, of M ocksviile; M rs. Mamie Byerly, of Lexington, and Mrs. Arthur Campbell of Statesville. B etter call at this o ffice now and get you r land pos­ ters b efo re th e tu p p ly is ex­ hausted. Printed on h eavy card board. 50c. per dozen. __________ Booneville, N . C . FO R S A LE — Approximately 500,000 feet of pine and popular timber, 100 bales of clover hay. and 100 pounds red clover seed. One 28'disc cutaway harrow. See B IL L E L L IS , Advance, N . C . After 6 P. M. FO R SA LE—30*acre farm, with 4*room house. Cood water and bam. A ll land in cultivation. 2 miles north of Mocksviile, on Mud M ill road. T . P . Dwiggins, M ocksviile, N . C. Jeff G riffith, Executor of Martic Ada G riffith, w ill sell publicly all the persona] property belonging to the deceased, at the home in Yadkin Valley section of Davie County tor cash, on the 15th day of November, 1952, The sale w ill begin at ten o’clock, a. m . FO R SA LE—Five-room house and 27 acres of land, with some timber. Good outbuildings. Lo­cated in Fork. Call and look over this property. A bargain. _ H . W . B A IL E Y , Fork, N . . W A N TED — Experienced ma­chine operators. W ill train good reliable girls. Also like to have < one good young man to train as ' cutter and pattern marker. Apply i. M O N LEIGH G A RM EN T CO .M ocksviile, N . C. F ir s t I n T h e F i e l d Far mall A SIZE F o r E v e r y N e e d R a n k i n - S a n f o r d I m p l e m e n t C o . Phone 96 Mocksviile, N.C. A fe w land posters left- L e t U s F u r n i s h Y o u r H o m e F o r THANKSGIVING A Complete Line Of Funiture And Home-Fumishings F o r T h e Home. L i v i n g R o o m S u i t s , B e d r o o m S u it s D i n i n g R o o m a n d K i t c h e n F u r n i t u r e , Lounging Chairs, Breakfast Sets, Cotton and Felt Mattresses Studio Beds. ; A FULL LINE OF Simmons and Southern Cross Mattresses f Toble And Floor Lamps In A Variety Of )*^atterns Frigidaire Electric Ranges, Refrigerators, Hot Water Heaters, Duro-Therm Oil Circulators. ; IF Y O U N EEP A N Y T H IN G IN THE FU RNITURE LINE 1 C A LL A N D L O O K O V E R O U R BIG STOCK. Price . And Terms: To Suit Your Purse. J U N K E R B R O T H E R S F a r m e r s H a r d w a r e & S u p p l y C o . Phone 46 Salisbury Street Mocksviile, N. C. .'’A-l ■> i'-I\ ' PAGB EOUR Dr. Foriman THE OAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE N. C. SOVBMBER 6 1962 Ar e Americans becoming bru* talized? Some thoughtful peo* pie believe we are. As Dr. Charles T. Leber reports, when his tather and mother read the account ot the tinking of the Lusitania back before World War I. they were so upset they could not eat. Now we can read about the destruction of an entire city and go right on eating breakfast.We in Amcrlca invented and used the A-bomb and now we con« celve the H*bomb. We train men to kill other men with flaming Jellied gasoline, with knives, with what­ ever seems to be most usable and deadly. We kUi people on the high* ways, or we don't do enough to keep them from killing themselves. In such quantities that wc don’t even read the newspaper reports about it unless some friend of ours happened to be in the smash. If as many people died in your town of polio, br of typhoid fever, as die in accidents, you would all be in al­ most a panic. A Word Wc Need There is an old English word that is not used often nowadays. Maybe thc reason it is seldom used is that the thing it means is seldom m et with. It is the word “compaB. sion.” Literally, it means "suffer- ing-with.” When It is said by Mat* thew that Jesus had compassion on the crowds, it moons literally that he knew how they felt, what they needed, where they hurt; and that In his own heart he suffered with them. Their needs were his needs, their pain his pain. That is com­ passion; but It is not yet the whole of it. There is something more. An artist (let us say a novelist) has to have compassion, oi a sort. Many novels and stories .have been w rit­ten. for Instance, about bull*flght> ers, and some of thc story«tellers have shown a high degree of imag­inative power. You might almost fancy they had been bullfighters themselves, as to be sure some of them have been. But few if any of these story-writers have done anything-to put a stop to the briital sport of bull-fighting. They fee] the tragedy of the whole business yet they do not propose to do anything about it. Compassion, as Jesus felt it. never was a mere enlotion. It was emotion harnessed to action. H arrasscd ami Helpless The Revised Standard Version translates beautifully Matthew’s description of the crowds w ho, moved .Tesus to compassion. They were “harassed and helpless,*' he says. The inturesting thing is that it took Jesus to see this. Some could see only that .here were a lot of people, and they took up a lot of room, and there was hardly room or time for Jesus to eat. Others—the Pliariseos—could sec only their Ignorance: “This multi­ tude that knows not the law is ac­ cursed.” Others <as was the case with the disciples on n later occa­ sion) realized only that the crowd looked huncry- Well, thc people ' were numerous, they were no doubt ignorunt, and most of them were chroniCHll.y lll-fed. But th,e point Is, the people who saw them in this Ilf!ht did not have com- paslon. nil they felt was annoy­ ance. Thc crowds were a nuisance. Jesus felt quite different toward them. He saw them as they were, . harassed and helpless. You your­ self run into crowds, or you read about them.’ How do they strike you? Do they frighten you, amuse you, annoy you or make you angry? I'he masses today are very litUe different from thc masses in Jesus' time. Can you see them as they arc. hnrnssed and helpless? And does it sth* ynti to do some­thing about it? Then you know something about thc compassion­ ate heart. T h e In m o s t N e ed •There is another Important laet about Jesus* compassion. One can­not call it unique, for the best Christians have shared it. He was able to see beneath the surface of things to people's real needs. The young m an brought by his four friends to Jesus probably was thinking chiefly about his helpless arms and legs. Jesus looked and saw his helpless soul. The publi­ can Matthew may well have felt sorry for himself because business was bad, or because he was not popular. Jesus' compassion went deeper; he felt Matthew's real need—to get away, from the publi­ can business altogether. Compas­sion goes even deeper than sym­ pathy; it is spiritual interpreta­ tion. b; Olviiian " * YOUR CnSYHOUND AGBNT for BEST BUYS I N T R A V E L T O A L L A M E R I C A You'll find him at Ihe sign of the running Greyhound In 70G0 towns In oil 40 states , , , and Ground the v/orld! EASTBOUNDBums Unva: t0:00 ». m. 12:50 p. m. 2:05 p. m. 4:45 p. m. 6:45 p. m. 9:45 p. m. A'lN STO N -SALEM $ .65 G REEN SBO RO , N . C . 1.35 R A LEIG H , N .C . 3 25N O RFG LK, V A . 8 10 WESTBOUND Du»es Leovo: 7545 a. ni. 9:00 a.m . 11:20 a.m . 1:00 I?, m. 2:45 p. m, 5:50 p. m. S T A T E S V ILLE $ .60C H A R LO TTE 145DAVIDSO N 110A SH EV ILLE 345 n m r«i. SMfn on Rotmtf Trlpt W ILK IN S DRUG 00, P&oue 21 Mocksville. N. C. Trade-la *'Wby, what are you erytaif ae for. sonny?" asked Dad of U s four-year-old heir. ••I heard you say you were going to get a new baby and I suppose that means you’ll trade me in on it,” he sobbed. He’U Fbid Out **Is that m an rich?” **Is hel He’s so rich he doesa't know his son's in college.*' Fam iliar Voice ‘‘ •‘The waiter laughed when I spoke to him in French. No won­ der, it was m y old prof.** He'U Be Sorry WUlie (dohag his homework)— “What is the distance to the near­ est star. Daddy?'*•*I'm sure I don't know, Willie.** -Well. I hope, then, you’ll feel sorry tomorrow when I ’m getthig punished for your ignorance.*' Say It'w ith Flowers *‘I say, George.” said the young n to his friend, "where do you buy your typewriter rib­ bons?"“I don't,** replied the other. “I usually buy her flowers.*’ Thank Heavena A m an was walking down the street one evenbtg with a friend, and pausing to look up at the starry sky. remarked with enthu­ siasm: "How bright Orion is tonightl” **So that is O’Ryan, Is it?** re- pUed Pat. *‘WeU, thank goodness there*s one Irishman in heaven anyhowi" The ReasoD **Wliy did you put that m ud tur* tie in your sister's bed?" "Because I cotddn't find any frogs." Dirty Work Mother>-'*Your face is clean, but how*d you get your bands so dirty?"«ma1l Son—'.'Washln* m y face.*' EBflSSWflHD n m ACROSS1. Scorch6. Whiteness XI. River <Gcr.)12. Mountain (Gr. Myth.)13. A hoof sound 14. Hall!15. Earth as a goddess16. Restoring 18. H alf an cm20. Tree21. Small measure 24. Inflamed spots on eyelids26. Macaw27. Helmet- shaped part IBot.)2D. Inclose In surrounding •matter 31. One-spot card32. Ninth day before the ides 34. Noah's eldest son 36. Small mass37. On account (abbr.)39. Very poor 42. Therefore44. Sheltered side45. Girl’s name (poss.) 46. Become visible48. Servitude49. WIHov.»s CO. FO R PU RE C R Y ST A L IGE C O A L FO R G R A TES, STO V ES. FU R N A C E A N D STO K ER S It W ill Pay You To C all O r Phone U«. We Make Prompt Delivery Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co. Your sons or daughters who are away a I college would like tg read The Davie lecord. Only $1 fo^'the school term Noggin, Piggin and Treen Were Heard in Early USA 'Trcen'* in Us earliest use was a plural for “tree'*. Laier the word was applied to woodenware gen­ erally. “Noggin", a small wood mug, was a common Item of the treen trade of 150 years ago. So was the “piggin” , a baby bucket that had a stave sticking up to serve as a dipping handle. The noggin and thc piggin were prime tools in fam ily life when Abraham Lincoln was a boy and water was commonly carried by hand to house from spring, creek or well. They were also prized as measures in the sale of whisky when it retailed at a penny a snort and at 25 ccnts per gallon iug—with the consumer providing his own jug. Whisky not only came cheap but American blood ran hot in those days. Duels were fought, and these very often, with noggins or pigglnx for weapons. The piggin preceded the bungstarter as an instrument for enforcing peace in the common saloon, history records. Whittling boys of Colonial times grew up into carpenters v/ho were kings of labor all over the Colonies Others became sliipwrlgbts Snns of this breed came lo Bo*!*on In due course, lo l;n’1rl the C*'*'''*’*u- tlon of while nak from Now .IcfFey ‘ and white pine frrm Maine A m m 'l 20 years ago new masts were cut for the old flarship. then nrw a floatlnn 'muFcum. in a Columbia River sawmill. Tl ey wc"<* OonQlas fir The malnmo''t wa.*! 36" and 112 feel 1rr». The main yard timber was a fl^-footer. Notice to Creditors Having qiinli6ed ns Bxccutor of thc estate of F. H . Bahnson, de­ ceased, notice is hereby given to till persons holding claims aginnst <ald estate to present the same, properly verified, to the under­ size d nt Cooleemee,'N C .. on or before the 30th day of September, 1953, or this notice w ill be plead in bar of recoverv. A ll' persons indebted to said estate w ill please make prompt settlement. This >Oth day of September, 1552.CH AS. F. BAHNSO N.E xr. of F. H . Bahnson, Decs'd. M r . F a r m e r ! F r e e r ! - ' ! r “ ? o v « F o o rf ti 't n o i s i n s F l a v o r s Freezing dees not improve f'ods Bill Ih-ou^iii free2i?-.R u greiuer am ount«'{original flavor anri crior can be resained than through any other niriliod of pra.>fcrvaiio.» ac­ cording to Pr. PdUlSnc Paul of tiie Michigan state crilege fcods and nutrition de,'?arimenl Or!;iinal food value Is well re­ tained by freezing, ibo. And il Is interesting to nr.ic ih»» tci'caler loss of vltamine and minerals cones from careless handMni'. than from frozen slrrage. Dr Paul advisedIn considering what praductf to freeze, a 'goo'l rulf* of thu^nb is that fruits and vegetables which are usually canned wiM frn<?-e pat* Isfactorily. Meats, ponlti'v. fish and eggs may also be prc.<:erved by freezing. There arc PxcepMons. of course—foods eaion raw like let­tuce, ct'lory. pn'nns cucumbers ond radishes d« n»»f freeze well. Tomaioes an-'* pf>ar« are . Jt prac ticable freo-in'* prntfnc's. n"'- are hlgh-starrh crn‘« il ?i—•• as poJatres. r co and macaroni. In t: *n‘J*‘al. Ir'‘c;:c only the best— Past Explaining What a stenog can’t understand Is why, when she is such a treat-for the boss’s eyes, he should get so nasty about a few misspelled words and balled-up letters. Maybe She Win Modern G irl — Would make a wonderful cook if she could And a kitchen that was run by a steering wheel. Always Late "M y word, Dick, you've got the latest thing hi stenographers." **She Is certainly that. She never gets here till ten." SEE US FO R Self-Propelled Corn Pickers, Drills, Used o r new, o f f r r anything you need in Farm Machinery V / e c a n save you m o n e y Hendrix & Ward W IN STO N -SAI.EM H IG H W A Y O p i)o v tu » ily = K n o c k s (; b o Y o : P en d T h e R eco rd ?’ NEW H ON EY K M YOUR OLD n U N C S PW - b . B « , k . I r ii «Hk A V A H T A lilfl n u R E v s r / m Phone 116 Mocksville, 1C. C. LET US DO Y O U R ; 0 B P R I N T I N G We can save you-money on your ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL HEADS, PACKET H EADS, Etc. ' Patronize your home newspaper and thereby help build up your home town and county. THE D AVIE RECORD. ♦ FOR RENT ♦ SPACE IN THIS PAPER Will Arrange To Suit GOOD NEIGHBORS-P?ICES TO FIT yOUR BUSINESS T h e D a v i e R e c o r d Has Been Published Since 1899 5 3 Y e a r s Otheirs have com e and gon e-your coun ty new sp ap er k e e p s Roing. Sim etim ea it has seem ed hard tn m elee “ buckle and ton gue” m eet, but soon the sun rhines and w e m arch on. O u r faith fu l subscribers m ost o f w hom pay prom ptly, give us courage and abidin g faith in our fellow m an. If ynur neighbor is nul lakin g The R ecord tell him to subscribe. T h e price is only $ 1.50 per 'year' in Ih e State, and $2 00 in other states. VVhen You Come To Town Make Our Office Your Headquarters. Wf» Are'Alwavs Glad To See You. The” Davie Record D A V IE O O U N T T rS O j^D B S T N E W S P A P E R - -T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P I.E K E A I> SHALL THE PP^SS. THE PEOPLE'S RIGHTS M AINTAINt UN AW ED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN ” VOLUM N L in M O C K SV ILLE. NO RTH C A R O LIN A , W EDN BSDAV NOVEM BEIIl la . loM.NUMBER ts NEWS OF LONG AGO. ThemckedBuried And ForgottenWhat Was Happening In Da- vie Befortt pArkinK Meters And Abbreviated Skirtt. (Davie Record} Nov. i, 1933.) J . T . Aoseli made a baslnes' trip to Wlnston^alem Friday, J . C Spnford left Saturday for Chicago, wbere be w ill spend a week. Mrs. R . L . Walker and dadRh- ter Helen soeot Thursday In Sails* bury, on business. Mrs. J . 6. Jobnstone and 6on Knox, spent Friday in Winston. Salem sbopploff. M rs; Jack Alllsbn and Miss Oh. sle Alllsoo spent Tbnrsday In Cbar- lotte sbopplug. Mr. «nd Mrs. T . F . Bailey, of Sbady Grove, spent one day last week |n town sboppint;, . HIse Ruth Daniel, a stndmt at Catawba College. Salisburv, spent the week-end bere wltb ber parenlo. Mrs^ C. K . Cbrlstlan spent the week.«nd In Ralels*b wltb ber son Hanes Yates, wbo Is a student at N . C. Slate ColluKe. Mr. and. Mrs^ Rowe Davis, o E lk in , spent tiie.week>end In iown vIsltlttK Mrs' baivls parents Mr, and Mrs. R . L . Walker. ^ Miss Mary Nelron Andeiwn, a atudeot' at Salem* College, ^spept tbe week end here with her paints Mr. and Mrs. Z . N. Anderson.^. . Miss Sarab Galtber. a member of tbe Gastonia school faeuUv, apent the week-end In town wltb ber parents, Mr. and Mra. B . L . Galtber. Miss Kathleen Craven, a mem. ber of the Senior class at Greens- boro College, spent tbe week end n town with ber mother, Mrs. J. A . Cntveo. P r. S. A . Harding spent several dsys recently In Eastern Carolina hunting deer. The doctor tells us that be shot and killed one deer at a distaace of 70 vards. W lljUm Mttmh, who under, went an appendicitis and gall blad. 'per operation at Davis Hospital, Statuvltle. last week. Is getting >a. toiig as well as mnld be expected. The erst Ice and killing Irw t o( the season struck Davie county last Thursday morning. The, mercury descended lo 33 degrees above"*ero, Jnst one degree above freezing. J.: Lee Cartner and Atlas Smoot, of Calahaln, were among our farn*- era who sold tobacco on the WlnF. ton Salem market last week. Mr. Smoot got an average of a little over $91 per bundren. while Mr. Cartner got around per bund, ten. Marcus the three>months old son . ot Rev. and Mrs. R . C, Goforth, who has been a patient a lobrs Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, for the past two months, was brought home Tbttrsday morning. The lit< tie fellow la getting alo g nicely. Mr. and Mrs. C. T . W . Smith, ot Woodleaf, were In town Satur day. evening 00 their way home from Bunn, Franklin countv, where thev went to attend tbe fnn. eral and burial of Mrs. Smith's mother, Mrs. A . R . Strickland, 78, who died suddenly at her home Thursday morning. . Miss Helen Fave Holthouser, student at N . C. C ., Greensboro . apent the week.end In towu wltb U r , and Mrs. Roy HoltbouseV. Mr. and Mrs. )ohn Prank Poster, and daughter* Frances and Norm» lean, who apent the summer with M r. and Mrs. I R . Poster, bave re. turned-to Homestead, Fla ., whete they w ill spend'tbe winter. , / Miss Mary Allen Hendrix a mem. ber of the Walkertown school facul \ty. apent tbe week.end In town wltb Her parents, Mr. and Mrs T . M. Hendrix. Sbe had a s.b e r guest Miss Howard Mnmford. of Raleigh, wbo Is also a r teacher at Walkertown. Rev. Walter B.IeNboor. TaTlofsvUle. N. C There Is a passage of Scrlpttire found in Proverbs 8:10 which savs, I saw the wicked burled, who had come and gone from tbe place of the.holv. and they-were ..forj^otten in tbe city wbere they had so done, this is also vanity." How soon wicked people are for* gotten by the public, and by suc­ ceeding generations, when they are buried 1. Many of them never have a tombstone t o their grave, and certainly no ..monument. Others mar have their grave marked by a tombstone, or even a monument of granite or marble, but nobody goea there, looks on, weeps nud rises up and calls them blessed. Why? Be. canse they lived .for.the devil, left God out of their lives, destroyed much good, and left no lufluenre behind to uplift and bless tbe lives of their feilpwmeo.: Had you ever thou^t about those who h9ve .come and gone from chnrcb, and the.,p1aces of re­ vivals, and where Ood's people as. sembled for worship^' who died wltbout'.God? T^ey had. the glo* :rl6us opportnnltv, time and again, of repenting and being saved, from all their sins, of being sanctified, and of living a wonderful Chris­ tian life ,, but thev didn't,; No doubt many of tbem were proved for, were applied to In regard to tb'elr soul's salvation, even wept over, but th^v; turned their frleuds away, turned God away, turned Jesus a« way, tur^ned tbe Holv Spirit away, and went' on and on in sin and wickedness until death. Careless* ly they put off their salvailon until It was’eternally too late ^ to make peace with God, then die a^ they bad lived without God. Hownad to live aniid‘;so many golden -opportu* nitles In life, and the supreme op- portutiliy'of redemption and eternal salvation, but neglecting them all. even sometimes spurning salvation, then die and go to the grave and belt Tbe*memory of tbe vast multitudes of such people Is soon forgotten, al- though the evil thev did. the good they des'royed, lasts 00 and on as tbe years and ages roll by. If you go Into tbe cemeteries of our nations todav vou w ill see graves with no markers except a bare rock 00 name upon it, or view thousands of graves with tomb rocks to them, and the names of those on tbe tomb rocks who are'bnrled beneath thnm, but verv few people wbo are living know anytblg about their lives especially if tbev lived in sin and died with, but God. Gone and forgotten. How pathetic! If they bad. livtd for God their memories would have lived on. Got Eoerythini lu tbe big.'Republic n. landslide last week tbe .Elephant Partv cap. tured everything from the Prest^ dency to the House and Senate Harry Truman was given tbe big­gest drubbing ever suffered by a Pendergast machine politician. He has gone do^n to oblivion -and so mote it be. * . NO CHANCES Tony was having his second son christened and being very an* xious lo have his' name recorded correctly on the birth certificate, ren'orkcd to the clergyman: ••Will yA plecze'nama by babe same as I giva you?” “Tony, why do you make such-a request?” isked thc clergyman. ‘•Wella, you see—Itsa like dis. My (irsta boy I tella you I want hcem christened “Tom” and you putta Thomas on* his paper. Now I wanta dis boy nama ‘Jack* and no wanta heem nama 'Jackass*/' TALLEST DWARF A circus side-show advertised a dw arl who was five feet In height. ' When a citizen expressed sur> prise to thc proprietor, he replied, “That’s the wonderful thing about him . He's the tailed dwarf In the world.” i Foul Ball An Englishman was once per* suaded to see a game of baseball, and during the play, when he hap* pened io look away-'for a moment, a foul tip caught him on the ear and knocked-him senseless.' On coming to himself, he asked faint* ly, “W hat was it?” * : ”A‘ foul->*only e foull” ‘ "Good heavensi” he exclaimed. •*A fowl? l.thought itw as a mule.” V Booby PrlseT Fond Mother—”Now that Harold is through college, are you gotag to take him into the business with you?” Frank F a th e r — ”I dunno. Couldn't you use him for a bridge prize?” LL’CKV THIEVES McTavish was homeward bound one night when he was waylaid by three th’leves.. He defended him* self with great coun ge and obstin­ acy, and the struggle that followed was - long and bloody. At length, however, he was overpowered. The thugs, anticipating a rich booty after the extraordinary resistance they had experienced, began to go through his pockeU. They were baffled to find that the whole treas* ure which the' Scot had been de. fending at the hazard of his life was a bent sixpence. “ Only a sixpence." exclaimed one of thc disgusted rogues, nurs* ing his bruises.“Weel, we're lucky at that,'* said another,-'“if he had'had eighteen* pence he would ha' killed all o* ^ M M V Ca s t a w a y s ’ I Thanks. Lord I ; Llt.ie Cindy had not been ob« ' serving the proper table manners, and as a punishment she was made to eat her dinner at a little table in the corner of the dining room. She was ignored by the ; rest of the family until they heard her saying grace:I “ I thank thee, Lord, for pre* paring for me a table in tbe pres* enee ot mine enemies.” Warning! On a farm In South Georfia Is posted this sign:"Trespaser's w ill be persekut* ed to the full extent ot 2 mean mongral dorgs which ain't never been ovarly soshlbU with strang* ers and 1 dubel barled shotgun I which ain't loaded with no aoty plllers. An Irishman was sitting In a station smoking, when a woman I came in. and sitting beside Mm, remarked: “Sir, if you were a gentleman, you'would not smoke here]” “M um ,” he said, “if ye was a lady ye'd sit farther away.” Pretty soon the woman burst out again:“If you were m y husband. I ’d give you poison!”“Well, m um .” returned the Irish­ man. as he puffed away at his pipe, “If you wuz me wife. I'd take It.” THEY LEARN YOUNG Little WiUle was In a store irlth his mother when he was given- eandy by one of the clerks. ”What must yon say, Wllllet*' “Charge It,” he replied. Can’t Believe It Mr. O'Toole: Absolutely shock­ ing—I've never played so badly before.Caddie: OhI So you have play­ ed before? No Wonder . That musician said that the tune 2 haunted him.Why 8houldn*t~it? He murdered It. LEFTOVERS Our County And Social Security Bv W . K . W hite. Manager. An Importnnr change In the so* cial security law took place In luly which is of special interest to ser­ vicemen and their survivors, i As a result of this new provl* sion. m ilitary service from Sept ember 16. 1940 to Dcccmber 31, 1953, can count toward social se* curitv payments. To survivors of scrvicemcn. this ' may mean that they can now be paid monthly benefits, even (hough they mav not have been eligible for them before this change in the law was ' made. The 1952 amendments provide social security wage credit of $160 per month for m ilitarv service h-om July 24, 1947, through De­ cember 31, 1953. Thc wagecreditfc for m ilitarv service after the end of W orld W ar I I count both to* v>ard survivors benefits and rc« tirement benefits for months after August 1952, but do not count to­ ward lumpsum death payments where the serviceman died before September 1952. As a result of thc new law. m ilitarv service from September 16, 1940 through Dc­ ccmber 31, 1943, can count to» ward social security payments. Wage credits arc posted to the veteran’s account at the time the appllcatiyn is processed for bene­ fits. Proof of rhe period of ser­ vice is required only at >the time of appllcatio i. Therefore, veter* themselves do not need to take any action now to establish the wage credits. It is believed that many surviv* ors do not know or have over­ looked thc foct that social securi' curitv benefits may now be pay­ able CO them. If you have never inquired or if you have not in* quired since the President signed the new Social Security B ill July 18, 1952), you should do so promptly at your nearest social se* curity office. A representative of this office w ill be in M ocksville again on Nov. 5th, at the court house, second floor, at 12;30 p. m ., and on the same date in Cooleemee, at the old Band Hall* over Led* lord's Store, at 11 a. m. I W e don't like to m ak e X m arks after yo u r nam e. Four separate wrecks had cast up four men on a lonely island of the South Seas. There were two Scotchmen and two Englishmen. Alter several*^ years a passing steamer hove to and took the four aboard. Sandy and Donald found their way to the skipper's cabin, and in telling their experiences Sandy said: “It would grieve you, mon. to see the EhigllshmenVfNevdr a'woVd did they speak all -^e time tliiey were there: they were not intro­ duced.”“And hoo did ye lads muck oot?'* Inquired the skipper.“Aye, mon, the dee I found Donald on the beach we organized a Caledonian society, a golf club, and a Preesbyteerian ^hur^h.” The mistress who engaged a -.-new cook made a tour of-investlga- ...tion after she had kept her a week ' and found a policeman locked up ; .‘inithe pantry. “How did this man get here?" she asked severely.. . .“r m sure I don't know,” was the; reply. “Ho must have been lefr^ver by thc last cook.” .. • y-X No Greek Business ^ :v“There’s a college graduate at fih e door. He wants a job.” “What can he do?” asked the self-made man. "H e says he’s t>rctty good In Greek.” , ^ • - “Umphl Tell him I haven't sold- . |2 w orA of goods to Gree.cc since •I’ve been In the export business.” The Last Battle Teaeher— “In what battle did ■ Gen. Wolfe, when hearing of vie- V tory, cry, ?I die happy'?” Johnny—“ I thtaik H was)his last •battle.” Seea Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. 000000 Young man and wife from the far Pacific isles lunching In drug store—Miss Mary McGuire mail­ ing big bunch of letters—Gilm er Brewer getting afternoon hair cut -M rs. John Bowden, Jr., M rs. R . P. M artin, Jr., and babe sitting in parked auto drinking large coca* colas *-M rs. E . W . Crow doing ex­ tensive shopping on warm day a- round the square—Lawrence Car­ ter waiting around postoffice to catch a' ride home—’Reba Ann Furches hurrying up Main street on warm afternoon-^Harmon Mc­ Mahan standing on Main sheet watching crowd go by—M r. and M rs. Henry Grimes doing some morning shopping—^Tired politic­ ians trying to explain how it all happened-'Mrs. Charles Allen shopping in dime ^ store—Gray Smith walking up middle of high­ way carrying big camera Reuben Berrier carrying small dog down Main street in his arm s-Jo Ann Call looking for new half dollars -^Family reunion being held in front of empty store building on Main street—Miss Ruth Lakev on her wav to lunch—>Noah Dyson and C . L . McClamrock leaning on electric light pole on square talk­ ing things over—Miss Flossie Fos­ ter eating chicken salad sandwich —Charlie Howard and Ed Lagle having street comer chat-H ubert Frost resting In barber chair— M rs. Clarence Grant and daughter- sitting in parked car on M ain street watching the world go by— Big Saturday morning crowd in bank getting checks cashed—^Mrs. Charles Blackwelder resting near stove In dry goods store—Brvan Sell making pre-election forecast— W ill Markland sympathizing with ^ e new presidcnt-*Young ladles resting in Iowa auto parked on M aiii street***Hungry man buying Thanks^ving turkey early to a- void the rush—Cecil U ttle and Claude Frye expressing their sen­ timents in a vigorous manner*** Lady trving to get into store rc- cendv vacated by grocery and mar- Icet—Charlie Bailey getting before Thanksgiving hair cut-*Thirsty man wanting to know where he could get bottle • of cold beer*- George Rowland talking about making vtstt to the Palmetto state 'Baptist m inister figuring on pur chasing new suit of clothes***Gil* bert Atwood devotiring big slab of cherrv pie***Young men from North Wilkesboro buying gent*s furnishings from Leslie's Men's Shop. The Gift Shop M RS. C H R ISTIN E W . D A N IEL M AN CAN HOPE M a~ “Don’< yor. think Em ily sings with a good deal of feel- Ingf” Pa — *Tes bui I hope she doesn't feel as bad as It Her Strong Point “Wonder why the boss keeps that stenographer, she can't spell.” ' “No; casting a spell is her strong point.” . Shoaf Coal & Sand Co. We Can Supply Tiour Needs IN GOOD CO A L,, SAN D and 'B R ie k Call or Phone U s A t Any tim e PH O N E 194 Formerly Davie Brick GtCoal C6 HERFS GOOD NEWS YO U CAN B U Y A New Singer Sewing M a c h in e A« Low As $92.50. • Liberal Allowance For Your Old Machine, rr-r. ;. Budget Term s. \ Special terms to tobacco and cotton fanners. Buy now and pay one*thind. Pay one-third on your 1953 crop, and one-third on your 1954 crop. Ask to see the new Singer Vacuum Clean­ er with the magic handle. W rite or phone for free demonstra* cion in your home. It Pays To Buy The Best. Come Bv, C all O r W rite Singer Sewing Machine CO M PAN Y 11 8. M ain St. LexinRton. N C . Phone 2238': PAGE TWO fHfe oAVife RiSTOBb. MOCKSViLlE. N.,C . NOVEMItpil 12. 1964 THE DAViii RECOKP. 1eI« E is e n lu w c r___ cclved more than 32,000,000 vtutis last Tuesday, the Inrtsesc numberC . FR A N K STR O U D , E D ITO R . Big Increase School enrotim nt in the Na- Entertv! nht? r: vi.K-ks- vlUo. N C. A> Mull m it t w M nrph !l. »90S. SU8SCRIPTI0N nATES: OVK VF.AK* IN N. TAROI.IN-X ? I.Sn SIX MONTHS »N N. CAROUNA 7S.*. ONF YE\R. niiTSinr: •ir.\jv . <2.nfl SIX MONTHS. OUTSinK STATR • $1 nO "IF MY PEOPLE. WHICH ARE CAllED BV MY HAME. SHALL HUMBLE THEMSEIVQ. AND PRAY. AND SEEK MY FACE. AMD TURN AWAY FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THEN WOL I HEAR FROM HEAVEN. AND Will FORGIVE THEIR SINS. AND Will HEAL THEIR lAHD"- 2 CHROH. V . U ._______ Uo to this good hour Governor A dlai hasn’t sent a card of thanks to Harry Trum an. Some of our local politicians have been busv for the past week explaining how it all happened. For the first time in more than 20 years Alexander County has elected a Republican to the State legislature. j W hat has happened to all our Democratic friends around town who were saying Inst week that Ike didn't have a chance? Th is countTV has been livinR in a fooPs paradise for the past twen­ ty years, but thev are going to wake up one of these days. Ever>’bodv, or a'niost evervbod is clad the election is over. Ne.gh' bors and fi lends can again dwell together in peace and unitv. If w c are not badly mistaken both Watauga and Stanley coun­ ties went Republican in the re­ cent landslide. W ill wonders nc' ver ceasc? o fv o tM c v e rrc c e d b y » p rci- beBl.mlne a long clim b, dential can Idatc. H is n’ »)or.tv for 1940. By over Stvenson was more than 1950 ,l.c nuurc mavbcc»p«ctcd lo SIX m illion. I ^ I The Rccord is rejolclnB that , . ' . . I Charles Raper lonas, of Lincoln* ton, one of North Carolina's out­ standing Republicans, M'as elected to Congress from the 10th Dis« trict. He carried all six counties in the district, which usuaIIv goes Democra Ic, by a majority of over 22,000. M r. Jonas is a nephew of The real climb in school en' rnllm ent began in 1946 when 23.' 500.000 pupils we-e enrolled. It Is estimated by a research report from Englehardt &. Englehardt &. Liggett rhat 27,000,000 pupils arc enrolled in the schuoN this year 1952. By 1960 th. total may be M rs. O . R . Allen and Mrs. John cxpcctcd to c-xcccd 34.000.000. Hardini!, of narminglon Town- The 1951 birth' rate broke the ship. Chas. A . Jonas, the father ''<••“ ■‘1 onained in 1947 and 1952 of Conisressnian Jonas, has beenW' in the a Bood friend of The Record edi- birth rate. The lu ll cflFect of birth tor for more than half a century. between 1947 and 1952. He served as Coneressman in th e;"-'” «<« be telt in the elem o.tnry lOth D istrict from 1929 lo 1931. , "■’ ools im til 1958. U n til then H is son, the new Congressman, w ill serve not only his district, but the entire country, with hon­ or to him self and his party in the 83 rd Congress. December Jurors *rhe following jurors have been No man who cuses; gambles and drinks to excess, is fit to be president of the United Stares, re* gardless of which party he re^jrc' sents. Do your Christmas shopping early and patronise ;he stores who appr»;clatc vour business en­ ough to ask for it through your newspaper. The Davie Record. Governor Byrnes, of South Car- olina, may be a mad old man and in his dot«ge, hut ihe voters in that State marched o the polls and gave General Ike a m :ijority. In .spite of all the lo:»g editor iais knocking General Ike, and the mighty efforts of a cori;iin In­ dependent, Davie County gave the General i m ajoriiy of more than 1,500 votes The Record sa d before the election that regardless of who was elected pres dene business was going to slack up in the next year or two. Keep your eyes open and see if we were not right. B ill LeGrand oufiht to get a job with the Gallop pulsters. He told us the dav before the election th:n that Stevenson wouldn’t carry over 10 states Wc Iau»hed him to scorn. He was rig ic. One lady remarked a fevv days before the election that if the men running for preildent were as crooked as thsy accused each other of beinj; neither one was lit . to be president. We think .nose folks say lots of things durinu a campaign that they con! Jn 't prove if put on a witness stand. there w ill be a steady clim b. The birth rate from 1935 to 1940 ranged from 18 to .19 births per thousand population. From 1941 to 1945 the rate ranged from 20 to 23, whi e from l946 to 1952 the birth rate has exceed 24. The rate of increased enroll' ment in the public schools in drawn lo r the December term of North parolina for the 1946-52 Davie Superior Court, which con- pcnod has been approximately 12 venes in this city on Monduy, P « cent in Davie County. In- Dec. 1st, with Judge Hoyle Sink!creased enrollment has been very pzesidii>g: slichr, the 1952 en ollment being Calahaln—W m. W . Cartner, A* aporoximatelylhesameas for 1951. P. Lanier, C . C . Smoot I Th is study indicates that in Clarksville—Glenn Reavis, A . son'c schools of the County we W . Ferebee, A . C . Ratledge. jean expect enrollment increases Farm ington-W . L . Riddle. W .|during the next four years that W . West, C . L . Hockaduy, Robert' w ill require additional classrooms. B . Lee. Such increase may be within the Fulion — Peter W . Hairston, next vear of two. Bonce Jones, Lu d ie rL. Sparks. ^ ggt. a n d M rs. Clayton R .Jerusalem—B . C . H inkle, Her- r a i- . tman Berrier, Albert E . Coble. I. E . Thompson, of Arlm ston, V.rem ia, Gregory. proud parents of a fine 8 Mocksville—M. R . Swicegood, pound daughter. Deborah Diane, T . L . Junker, John S. Green, G . C . who arrived October 23 at Ft. Bel- Swicegood. Army Hospital, Virginia. Shady Grove -W m . D . Foster. Mother and baby are doing fine. W ileyA. Cornatzer, W . S. Phelps. , . ._______________ M rs. Thompson is the former Miss D o you read The R ecord ? Carolyn Craven of this city. { Who sa^ T H E R F S N O T H IN G N E W U N D E R T H E S U N ? We don't—because we've just installed a new John Beon VISUALINER in our Steering Serv­ ice Deportment. It's- the first machine we- ever saw thot can moice driving soter by har­ nessing beams of light. Checks the wheel alignment on on outomoblle quick-os-o-flash and even' projects a picture on o screen so thot you con SEE FOR YOURSELF if your car needs attention. But you don't, hove to take our word for it. Drive in ond let the VISUALINER show you why your cor is steering hord. After oil, SEEING IS BELIEVING and you can see for yourself whether your automobile is right for soft, economical, high-speed driving. Pennington Chrevrolet Co, Inc. Phone 156-J M ocksville, N . C. % The Merchants Who Advertise in The Re­ cord Appreciate Your Business - T d The Voters Of Davie County 1 wish to thank the people of Davie County, both Democrats and Repub'ic<ins for thi? support and CDop»raiion iheygaweme in the past election I am de>.*ply grateful to every voter, and I will strive to serve t.Se people to the best oi^ my abiliiy, wiih partiali­ ty toward none. Your Frii-nd CHARLES R. VOGLER Register O f Deeds S E B HAMMOND ORGANS N EW A N D USED PIAN O S fo r EXTRA GOOD USED PIANOS Dei>enduble QimlUy and Honest Value in F I A ] ^ 0 § a „ a O K G A ] \ § • Yoti Can Depend On • J K S E B O H I eN M UJSIC C O . In b u iin est itinee 1903 217 W EST FIFT H ST. W IN STOM -SALEM . H . C. .............................................................................................................................................................................................^ O P E N F O R B U S I N E S S T h e M o c k s v i l l e H o m e & A u t o S t o r e Is Now open For Business Under New Management W e W ould Appreciate The Busineiss O f All Former Customers O f This Store, " And would be glad to serve all the people of Davie, ..and ac^joining counties when in need of anything in onr Ijne. ' Call and see us and look over our big «tock of merchandise. Briiig T he Children And Let Them See Our Big Stock Of Christmas Goods M c c k sv ille H o m e & A u t o S u p p ly Phone 36 Salisbury Street THB DAVIE RECORD, udCESViLLE. N. C NOVE!MBER 12. 195^PAI.E THRB the DAVIE RECORD O ldeitt P a p e r In T h e County N o L iq u or. W in e , B eer A de N E W S A R O U N D T O W N . M w. J . C . Jones spent Friday in Statesville shoppin'e. B . I . Sm ith spent Thursday aftet- noon in Salisbury on business. J. K . Sbeek is spending three weeks on a business trip to Florida Frank Stroud. Ir., returned Sun­ day from a biisiness trip to A t­ lanta, Ga... . ... June Meroney, of Lenoir, spent Thursday in town wItK bis mother M rs. H . a Meroney. M r. and M rs. W ilber Amos, of Asheboro, visited M r. and M rs: M arvin Waters last week. - M iss L illie Meroney is spendini sometime w ith her sister, M rs. John H od i^ , in Lexinston. R . B . Sanford spent several days last week in Washington, _ p . C ., with his son, U r. Marshall San­ ford. - C all at The Record office and get vour 1953 Blum’s Almanac. They ate free K> all who subscribe or renew their subscriptions. D r. and M rs. J. S. Frost, of Bur. lington, spent several days last week, with D r. Frost's mother, M rs. I . D . Frost, on Route 2. Jean Peoples, litde daughter of M rs. Lois Peoples, of Route 4, was operated on at Rowan Mem­ orial hospital for appendicitis last w « k . _ ^ Harley Sodev. well-knowo local barber, has been suffering severely with arthritis for the past two we«ks, his friends w ill be sorrv to M r. and Mrs James Fry are the proud parents of a daughter. Fa­ s c ia Eleanor, w h o arrived a t Rowan Memorial Hospital, Fri­ day, O ct. 31st. F. H. A Wedtce, arrived home Friday night _ . ,_____--.1. . . I i I I KiI..... ^ o . . . . .! Sgt. Herman V i and Ivvance,_____________________ _____ from Korea, where he had been The week of November 2-8 was stationed for seven months. H er. National F. H . A ., week. The man has received his honorable Future Homemaksrs of America fa t S & A ™ * Club in Mocksville Is observing ---- this week with special projects I l f in e H m t t L each day. On Sunday each mem-1rrins m%n nonor ber attended church. Monday, Bobby Mac Foster, son of M r. Publicity day. Posters were and R . L . Foster, of M oclaville placed on bulletin boards and has recently , been recognized in each ^member o f the F . H . A ., A e 1952-53 Edition o f “ Who’s;w ore red shirts and white blouses W ho,” among students in Am eri-’ j-i, „ j . _ j ' a n Universities a u d C o llLg e s.1 ",? « d and white ribboM pin- Students arc nominated for this the blouses.. Red and recognition on the base of sch'ol- white are the club colors. Tues xrship, lekdership, citizenship and day, was community day. Each potentiality. M r. Fmter is a pr& member is contributing to a box medical student at Catawba Col- „h ich w ill be Sent to the county home. Wednesday the member’s plan to clean the school grounds. On Wednesday night they attend­ ed the Rowan-Davie County Ral* ly at Boyden High School in Sal- Salisbury. Deanna Silverdis, Ann Kurfees, and Evona York, mem­ bers of the Mocksville Club, help­ ed entertain at the rally. On Thursday red roses were placed On each teachers desk. Eacft mem­ ber vras requested to fix a meal for their family that day. The new members of the club were initiat­ ed on Thursday night. Baptist Convention Meets The Baptist State Convention met at the First Baptist Church in Winston-Salem vesterdav and w ill continue.'throueh Thursday. A bout 2,000 Baptise from practically every secdon o ( North Carolina are in attendanee. A ll Baptist ministers from Davie County, to­ gether with a number of laythen, artf in attendance. Many promin* ent men are on the program dur- these three days, among them D r. Paul Caudill, pastor of the First Baptist Church ofSMemphis. Tenn. who w ill deliver the final address 'DvuTsday morning. WANT ADS PAY. FO R SA LE — Barbe W ire & Galvanized Roofing.M iliepEvans Hardware Co. FO R SA LE—Home-made mo* lasses. See Harmon McMahan, M ocksville, Route 2. A U C TIO N S A L E -O f farm e- quipment and stock. J . G . Craw- ford faim , Nov. 15, 10:30 a. m. 2 miles north-west of Cooleemee. FO R R EN T—Five-room house, newly painted, with hot*water hea­ter, wired for electric lanRe, locat­ ed on W llkesboro street. Call 263-W. or 190. Mocksville. FO R SA LE—1 pqir good rabbit dogs, guaranteed. 1 Redbone op< posum dos- See Jack Feimster, Harmony. N . C ., R . 2. M rs. L . P . Hopkins, and son Lee Hopkins, o f M artinsville. Va.* spent several days last week with M r. and M rs. Sam Allen on \h^ilkesboro Street. Misses Margaret Cozart and Nancy Latham, students at Ap­ palachian State Teachers College, Boone* spent the week-end in town w ith their parents. M r. and M rs. Richard O rrell and daughter Gwyn spent the week-end in Coal Fork, W . V a , guei^ of M r. and M rs. H . W . Mct^ughlln and'children. M r. and M rs. Victor Oben •hain, o f Washington, D . C .. spent ^ m l days last week in town, gueste of Mrs Obenshain*s par- imts; M r. and M rs. O . K . Pope. '^ e friends of A . A . Wagoner, who.has been a patient at Davis Hospital,. Statesville, for the past fix'w eeks, w ill be glad to know ^ at;he q>ntihueB to improve^ and h o |^ t6 be able to return home M » Robert C .. Caldwell and. tiiiwi^n^ of W innsboro, S. C ., re- tjiitfi^ home Friday after spend- |ng' a . week w ith telathies and M ^ da. M rs. Caldwell was be- forejm a^ ge Miss M.irgaTet Dan­ iel, V)f this dty. A j D a ^ , of Salisburv, has rent- fd 'th e’W allace fafuildingon North M d ii stteet, and is opening a tele- V^lph^store and ^ a ir shop. The ^ ^ oid is glad to welcome M r. b^^s to the best toyvn in North ■ C^ralina." ladies of the Easter Star w ill K^ e^ a Thanksgiving dinner in ^«^dirinirig roum of the-Masonic li^lKim bTrow evening, Nov. 13th, ftfliiiiliS \o 7 o’clock. Plates are ^^^6^'^VA wonderful menu w ill i^ i^^ed, with turkey predomi- you enjoy eating you ^ n ft a^prd to:ip^jls8!thif dinner FO R SA LE—30-acre farm, with 4 room house. Cood water and bam. A ll land in cultivation. Anyone wishing to work as a nurse's aid. between ages of 1845, white, applv at Mt>cksville Nursing Home for interview. miles north of Mocksville, on Mud M ill road. T . P . Dwiggins, M ocksville, N .C . W A N TED —W hite or colored woman, aged 45 to 65 years, in good health, to stay with elderly woman in comfortable country home. No outside work. Warm sleeping quarters. Board and some pay. W rite, phone or see M rs. I . D . Ftost, M ocksville. Route 2, on Yadkinville Highway. G e t R e a d y F o r Thanksgiving W e Have A Fine Selection O f Fall And W inter Goods From W hich To Make Your Seliection For The Approaching Holidays. You Will Want To Dress Up For Thanksgiving Come In And Looks Over O ur W onderful Stock O f Ladies and Mifses Ready-To-Wear, Children’s Dresses, Coats and Sweaters. Millinery, Hosiery, Shirts, Windbreakers, Suit-s and Coats, Scarves, Etc. Jeff GrifBth, Executor of Mattie Ada G riffith, w ill sell publicly all the personal property belonging to the deceased, at the home In Yadkin Valley section of Davie County for cash, on the ISth day of November,. 1952. The sale w ill begin at ten o'clock, a. m. FO R SA LE—"FiveTOom house and 27 acres of land, with some rimber; Good outbuildings. Lo­cated in: Fork. Call and look over ^is.property. A bargain, a W . B A ILE Y , Fork, N . J . W A N TED - Experienced ma- chine operators. W ill train good reliable girls. Also like to have one good young man to train as aitter and pattern marker. Apply M O N LEIG H G A RM EN T CO .M ocksville. N . C . W ANTED Milling W heat W ILL P A Y D ELIV ER ED O U R PLATFORM: $2.15 per bushel for ordinary low protein varieties milling wheat having test weight of 59 lbs. or betrer. $2.35 per bushel for Adas vari etv having protein content of I2|% testing 58 lbs. per bushel. Send sample of Atlas wheat for protein -determinadon be­ fore making delivery. Princess Theatre TH U RSD A Y & FR ID A Y “ DON’T BO TH ER TO KN O CK” Richard Widmard fii M arilyn Monroe News & Cartoon SA TU R D A Y “SM O KY” In Technicolor W ith Fred McMurry &, Anne Baxter. Serial & Carioo" M ONDAY & TU ESD A Y “ SOM EBODY LO V ES M E” In Technicolor W ith Betty Hutton & Ralph Meeker News and Cartoon W ED N ESD AY “YO U FO R M E” W ith Peter Lawford &. Jane Greer Comedy &. Cartoon DAVIE COUNTVS BIGGEST SHOW VALUE ADM I2c and 35c Coats, Suits, Dresses $4.98 Sweaters $1.98 Up Scarves - 50c Overalls $5.00 Up Shoes $?.98 Up Men’s Pants -$2.00 Up Hats $2,00 Up Jackets $2.98 U p SHOES FOR ALL THE FAMILY W e Can Fit The Entire Family From The Tiny Tot To Grandmother. You Can Save Money By Bringing Your Shoes Here, Hanes Heavy Underwear Coupons On China And Silver Given O n All Purchases D a v i e D r y G o o d s C o . Between Postoffice And Bank No MIstakesL " ".................... -------------------------^ how much "■«« 5;°" SEE WHAT YOU GAIN WITH THESE EXCLUSIVE CHEVROLET FEATURES SEE WHAT YOU SAVE WITH THE More Powerful Valve-in-Head Engine with Powcrglide Automatic Transmis­ sion (optional on De Luxe models at extra cost) * Body by Fisher • Center- poise Power • Safely Plate Glass aU around, with E-Z-Eye plale glass (op­ tional at exu-a cost) * Largest Brakes in its field • Uiiilized Knee-Action Ride. Statesville Flour Mills Statesville, « ! PENNINGTON CHEVROLET COMPANY, INC. P H O N E 156-J - - - M O CK SV ILLE, N .C . PAGE EX)UR fHB DAVIG KGCditri, MOCkSViLLk N. C. H0V5MPGR li l9Ei BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN MO. I m m o r t - a l T w e l v e Lesson for Novem ber 16,1952 IF the twelve Apostles wanted to join your church, would you let them InT Peter MarBhall thousM not. Books ol sermons are often dull reading, taut Dr. Marshall's book called Mr. Jones, Meet the Master Is as las* elnaUng a book as you are likely to lind anywhere. One of his famous sermons goes over an imagined application of the twelve Apostles for membership in a typical American church. One by one each man Is relected>-aU but Judas! As a m an of money the church wants his services.• * * Unprom ising M aterial Not to steal Peter Marshall*s sermon, nor to spoil your appeUtt tor it in ease you do read It, but just to explore the possibilities, let’s imagine yourself passing on the application of these men tor church membership. There Is Si> mon Peter . . , Well! He Is a fish* erman and a sailor, and you know what sailor's language is. Bome> limes. A m an noted for talking be­ fore he thinks. Not among our best people (they would say in Caper, naum ): lives down by the docks somewhere, smells of fish. No edu> cation, very limited background. Better wait. Maybe he could find a little chapel down nearer his work he’d be happier there. And then there's Jam es and his brother John. Hot-tempered and ambitious, in fact so conceited they're hard to live with. They would certainly want to be at the top—if thrones are passed out they will want one apiece In the front row. If they are crossed they are likely to call ’ down fire from heaven—not that they'll get it, but that’s the kind of young men they are. No, they will be too hot to handle. Let them go join some sect that wlU give their emotions a chance. We’ll be toe slew and too cold for them.« • • N olodics Then there is Thomas, for In­ stance. Just the oposlte of Peter. A cold, gloomy man. Takes the ^ark view of everything. VHiat you w ant In the church Is men of faith, and this is a m an who Is sure to be called the Doubter. Skepticism is contagious, we have enough doubters now without electing an- ■ other one. Let's leave him out. Then there is Philip, a stupid m an te ever you saw one. You can say a ■ thing to him over and over and he still won't get it. And Bartholomew and Thaddaeus or Lebbaeus or whatever his name is. and another Jam es and another Simon—thelrv names are common and so are. they. Just who are they, the whole lot of them? Nobodles, that's all you can say. Can you name one that has made a name for himself outside his native village—or in it, ** for that matter? What have they got to contribute? Haven't we got enough dead wood In the church as it is without adding some more people who w ill be nothing but names? Seems to me the pastor must have been scraping the bot­ tom of the barrel-these men cer­tainly didn't come from the top.• • • Jesus Made Difforcnce Even worse than all that could have been said of some of the Twelve. There was one very doubt­ ful character among them, the m an Matthew the Publican. Pub­ licans were tax-collectors for the Rom an government. No one re­ spected them; Jesus himself used the name Publican as meaning the lowest class of men. Who knew how slnccre Matthew was when he Joined the Twelve? There was also Judas, Im m ortal for another rea­ son; who was and who remained a devil. Jesus csllod two ol these men devils' at different tim ei; Judas stayed one, but Peter changed. That lets us in to the secret of why Jesus chose these particular mon. It was not for what - they were at the time, not for any­ thing they had accomplished, but for what he could do with them, that Jesus choso these men. He selected them lor o particular rea­ son: that they should go out and tell other men about him; To be ready to do this, they were to spend some time in close contact with him. When these men went out to speak for Jesus and the Kingdom of God they knew what they were talking about . . . and they were differ­ ent men. AU but Judas, who missed his Ufa’s great chance. For these other men-had let Christ have his , y a y with them. That Is whet the ' Church is and ought to be; the community of men end women who are being transformed, by Chrlsi. for service In his name. DeoreascltJiglnnlni In Irish CaHU Fain ^ Colorful Irish livestock (tdrs. tar centuries important In Ireland's rural life, are decreasing In num> ber but w ill never disappear com­pletely, ^This is the conclusion of Jos­ eph P. Haughton, lecturer In geog* raphy at Trinity College, Dublin. Mr. Haughton points out that while fairs are held In a network of Irish towns of 1,900 to S.COO popu­ lation, they are not the same thing as the weekly markets of English or continental European country towns. The fairs, which can be traeed back to the fourteenth century, are held as often as once a month. They are essential to the Irish farmer tor the sale of his young cattle and sheep, and to a lesser extent of other livestock. In the past almost all livestock In Ireland was sold at fairs, but fattened cattle and hogs ore now sold large­ ly to buyers who appear at Individ­ ual farms.The decrease in the number of country fairs has been marked in the past 100 years. Mr. Houghton says that In 1832 such gatherings, often attended by much of the rural polulntion In a village or town area, numbered 1.297. as compared to 002 In 1952. An Indlcntion of the decrease of social function of the fairs'is noted by Mr. Haughton in the increasing nppcarance of auctioneers. Cattle sales at fairs formerly were made almost entirely In deals between farmer and buyer, after protracted barRai’nln« often compromised, by a third parly, or "tangler.” Slitsh Cost of the House, > Save Koney on Mortgage Better planning and careful drawing of the contract can slash the cost of a house and save money on-a mortgaire. Since the major part of the pur­ chase price of a new home will have to be borrowed, the mort- guge put on a home today will de­termine for years to come, wheth­ er you will have a home you own or be tied to a home that "owns" you. To gel the best terms, you should know what. Is being offered by the lending institution. Whether you are building or buy- mg. you can save on a mortgage by sticking to easily marketable property, desirable locatlon.s near schools, shopping and transporta­tion. “Stay away from freak lay- outs, untried construction materi­ als and plumbing equipment.”In securing a mortgage contract, you should inquire with the lending Institution a ^ t features in the contract' that w ill make home- I ownership more comfortable: tire I firn. .’cll-rlpened fruits and fresh, tender vegetables Meats must be high in quality and handled prop­ erly from the time of slaughtering to freezing. Or. Paul warned. i Field and tree-ripened fruits have .the richcsi color and flavor for frozen storage The fruit should', be fihn-ripe and freshly picked. In I sorting and washing the fruit, take care to prevent bruising. HeadllA'bl Eyes Native did not provide the human eye with very good equip­ ment to deal with the dazzling glare of aulomobiie headlights at j night. Headlights arc a man-made invention which did not exist when eyes were being adapted to nor­ m al outdoors conditions, over ages of evolution. Nevertheless, the eyes make a manful effort to combat headlight glare, and they do a pretty good job nt it. The first de­ fense against the dazzle of on­ coming lights is the pupil of the eye,'with its m*»rvelcus ability to ccntrael and evpnnd. and thus vary the amount of light entering the eye. When cncruntering a rapid increase tn br r^'tnesp. as from an approach!^* headlight, the pupil Is able t' ''vrensc its area by 80 per cent in three seconds, as though It drawing a curtain over n'.ost of the eye's window. Behind th!.c curtain, the nerves of the retina have a chance to adapt . themselves lo the brighter light, .And that takes more time. The retina, however, is much better able to adapt to changes In bright­ ness than is the pupil. At Us smallest size, the area of the pupil is one-fourleenth of Its largest pos« sible. size. But .he difference in brightness between a dork road . and a" headlight Is much greater than that. EBBSSIBO m\i ACROSS 1. Price 6. Green herbage 11. Singly12. Very slowly (mus.) 13. Narrow strip of veood14. Banish 15. Attempted17. Slolh18. Refresh 20. Negativereply 4. Remove, u i 19, Band on aa harness S. ElectricalEngineer(abbr.) 6. European kite7. Twilled fabric «. Wild ox (Celebes)9. Longltudl* nal timber (RR )10. Habitual drunkard 22. Principally 14. Contradict 38, Clrrs'name 26. A crease 16. A 39. Pmsecutesscream(Zool.)27. Artist's stand 2S. lx>cnllons 2J>. Weapons 30. Tract of wasteland 31.1.ord (abbr.l 32. A ccnfectlon 34. N'orsc god 36. Strolls leistircly 40. Convoyed by cart 42. Abode of the dead (van)43. Constellation44. Like an old woman45. Distorts 40. Europeanskinks DOWN1. Valley (poet.) 2. Expression of sorrow3. Consijin- ments Jucliclully Your sons or daughters who are away at college would like to read The Davie Record Only $ 1 for the school term m w m m im i n r 1 m Notice to Creditors HavinR quuliiicd as Hxccutor of the estate of P. H . Bahnson, de­ ceased, notice is hereby given to nil persons holding claims ag<ii»st said estate to present the same, properly verified, to the under^ signed at Coolceniei*. N C „ on or before the 30th day of September, 1953, or this notice w ill be plead In .bar of recovery. A ll persons indcbccii to Kald estate w ill please FOR PURE CRYSTAL ICE C O A L FO R G R A TES, STO V ES, FU R N A C E A N D STO K ER S It W ill Pay You To C all O r Phone U>. We Make Prompt Delivery Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co. Phone . 116 ' Mocksville^ N . C . LET US DO Y O U R ^ O B P R I N T I N G We can save you money on your ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, STATEMENTS, POSTERS, BILL HEADS, PACKET HEADS, Etc. Patronize your home newspapter and thereby help build up your home town and county. THE D A VIE RECORD. nr uke prompt settlement. 30th dav of September, 1552. Th is CH A S. F. BAH N SO N , Exr of F. H Bahnson, Dccs'd. M r. Farm er! Undcrnei Good M tine. habits, important throughout life, coin an added im> portance when persons reach re­ tirement age. Undernourishment in old age is often the reason for ex* cesslve complaining, loss of sleep, anxiety, and eve., too much weight. To keep (he appetite sharp In later years, the U.S. Bureau of Human Nutrition offers these suggestions: oxerclse lightly, keep regular meal times, and keep food attractive with color, crispness, and seasoning. Avoid Damage Everybodr has lo carry at least one pesty bottle when they travel, • > It seems! And this one bottle can cause trouble If H leaks cologne, medicine or other liquids onto . your clothes. Avoid damage by put' ■ ting the bottle In a moisture-proof . cellophane bag. closed at the tip . . with a<. psper clip. Then, even l£' the bottle cap proves unreliabla, - the liquid can’t escape from the batf te 4P0ll your wardrobe. -■ YOUR GHSYHOUMD AGMHT for BESreUYS IN TRAVEL TO ALL AMERICA , You'd find him of fhe sign of lh«t running Greyhound In 70C0 towns in oil 48 .stales . . . and around the werldl EASTBOUND Buiof Leavet 10:00 a. m. 12:50 p. m. 2:05 p. m 4:45 p. m. 6:45 p. m. 9:45 p. m W IN -TO K'.^aLEM $ .65 G REEN SBO RO . N . C . 1.35 R A LEIG H . N . C . 3.25 N O R FG 1.K .V A . 8.IC WESTBOUND Buses Lcovet 745 a. m. 9:C0 a. m. 11:20 a. ra.1:00 p. m 2:45 p. m. 5:50 p. n '.S T A T E S V ILLE $ .6. (.H A R LO T T E L45 D AVID SO N LIOA S H E V ILLE 3 45I^ n m r.x. EMltm S m rtnit « . ffoMrf T rim SFEUS FOR 5 elf Propelled Gcfn Pickers, Drills, Used or new, or for anythirg you need in Farm Machinery. V/e can save you money. W IL K IN S D BU a 00. Phone Mockaville, N. 0. '" Y o u r li igh bor re a t* The R e c o r r J . ♦ FOR RENT ♦ SPACE IN THIS PAPER Will Arrange To Suit GOOD NEIGHBORS-WICES TO nr youR business Hendrix & Ward W INSTON •^ALEM H IG H W A Y Opporliinilys Knocks!; V E A D ' t l w A B 6 , NSW H ON EY P O a ^ YO U R OLD THINGS ttm B Iim IiI h n t a m ‘E s r s M t t « « 4 R T M I * T h e D a v i e R e c o r d Has Been Published Since 1899 5 3 Y e a r s O tb e n have com e an d gone-your coun ty n ew spaper keeps Roing. S'im etim es it hns seem ed hard tn m ake “ b u ckle and ton gu e" m eet, but soon the (u n thines and w e 'm arch on. O u r'fa ith fu l subscribers m ost o f w hom pfiy prom ptly, give us co u rag e and abiding faith in our fellow m an. Ifiyour neighbor is nut taking The R ecord tell him to subscribe. T h e p rice 'is only $ 1.50 per I'eat in the ktate, and $2 00 in other stiites. When You Come To Town Make Our Office Your Headquarters. We Are Alwavs Glad To See You. f - . . A ................... The Davie Record • ,D A V I E O O U N T X 'S O I- D E S T N E W S P A P E R - - T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P L E K E A I> «HEItE SHALL THE PPV.8S. THB PeOI>LE*S RIGHTS MAINTAINt UNAW ED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BY GAIN '* VOLUMN LIII MOCKSVILLE. NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 19 <qw NUMBER 16 NEWS OF LONG AGO. For Jesus What Wm Happening In Da­ vie Baforb Parking Meters And Abbreviated Skirts. (O ivie Record, Nov i 6, 1927) L . S, Boe«r, of Walnut Cove was In town Slturday. W. H . Foote, of Crewe. V a.. was iti* town FHd<tv ulieklne bands with his many friends here. Ha relnrbed home Sattsrdav. Jttae Meroney. Sari Tate an^ Misses Frances Ledbetter and Ver tee Utustead, of Lennlr spent F rI. day fn tbis city with relatives and friends. Misses Kopella and Jtilla Hunt who went to Wosblngtou to take trablbe: as a nurses In the W alter Reid hospital a few weeks aeo, have returned borne. The Baptist State Convention Is lo session st Durham tbis week. Rev. W . B. W iiff. of tbis city. Rev. Mr. Barnes, of Gooleemee and perhaps others from the couoty, are fn attendance. The many friends of Rev. J . T . Sisk, pastor of the Metbodist Pro. testant cbnrcbes in Davie County^ w ill be clad to know tbat tbe Conl ference wblch came to a close at Asbebdro lest week, returned bim to tbis 6e1d. Mr. sIsk bas been ^ rre for tbe past three years. J . N . Ijames, a truthful citlaen of tbis city, wai In our oflSce Tues. day of last week and told us tbat be bad found a watermelon In bi< garrten (bat day. H ectitaod at«> tbe melon and said it was 6ne. It weicbed around ten ponndb. No use to so to Florida for melons when you can eet them ber^. Tbe body of Mr. W . T. Koentz. who died In a Petersburg bospitn' N w . 6tb arrived here last T w a . day and was carried to the home of bis brother, B . C. Roontz. o iiR . r. The funeral and burial ser^Hces were held Wednesday and tbe'body was laid to rest In Salem erave yard. Mr. Koontz Is «tirvlved hv his wl^ow and several sonn dausbters, the younflfest child br* in s only about two weeks old. Mr. Koontz moved from jbis cmunty to Ammon,*Va. W hile cbaslnsr a fox bis borse ran into a fense throwlne Mr. Koontz and crusbinr bis skn^ He Jeaves many relatives an d friends In Oavie to monrn bis death. W illiam Stockton, of Sbelbv. spent Sunday In town with home folks. Mr, and Mrs. B . C; LeOrand * spent the week.^d bene with home folks. Mrs. Jack Allison Is spendlne some time with relatives In Wash Inston and Richmond. Robert Crotts who Is selling tn bacco lo the Palmetto State, spent tbe week-end In town with hib par.- eots. Davie county has 3 025 automo biles, which means that one person out of everv six In the county l« the owner of some kind of an auto. Miss Dorotha Norriot'ton. of Sa- iem ColleRe, was at home for the 'week*eod and bad as her euesis Miss Della Grant, of Mocksville. and Misses Marenret Smith and Laura ^ nrad. of Salem Colleee. ' Mr. John N. Ijames ^led at tbf> home of bis father near Cornatzer, early Wednesday mornine follow Ine an extended IHiiess; aeed 38 years. The funeral services were conducted by Rev J. L . K trk. of this dtv' Tbur«day afternoon at 3;50 o'clock, and tbe body laid to rest In the family burial eround. Mr Jones Is survived by his aged father and mottter, three brothers aud two sisters. Rev. C. M. McKinney who has '’been pastor of tbe FarmluKtou,' Smith Grove, Dethlehem and other ■ • Methodist Ghurches In Davie for the past four years, was transfer- . red to tbe Greensboro District and Rev. Valter 6. Iseahoor. Taviorsvlite. N. C I Let us read ,be fortieth verse of . tbe elebth cbaoter of Luke; *'And It came to pas!«, that,- when Jesus I was returnen, the people gladly re* celved him; tor they were waiting for him.*' Je9us bad been In Gadara where He tnet a man possesed with a le> glon.of demons, ane by H is mighty power had cast them all out. The man was then clothed and restored tinto bis right mind, wblch Is one the great miracles of our I«ord« However, tbe demons wenr Into a herd of swine which caused tbrm to run violently down a sleep place Into a lake, where they were sll drowned. This aroused tbe nager of the owners of the swine, there, fore they asked Him to leave their communiiv. Th is lesus did, for He won't stay where He Is not wanted, either In a heart, a bome» or a community. Ferhapps this mlrable o f His power bad spread abroad, there, fore the people ovar In Capernaum were walling for H is return. They wanted to see Him and be with Him. How different a re men! One thing that some bate and de. splse may be lust what another wants. This Is especially trne In regard to Jesus and salvation. 80 many don’t won't. him, therefore, drive conviction away, when His holy spirit visits their hearts and souls, in the meantime driving Jesus away. Others want Jesus, want salvatloii, therefore welcome Him into their hearts, souls and homes. Those who drive convictions and Christ away open tbe heart and mind, soul and spirit for tbe devil to come In and take full possession. Those who want Christ to come In open their hearts and lives to re­ ceive Him, and He casts tbe evil spirit and sin out and prepares them for heaven. Here is jnat a little thought I wont you to get; as the people In Caoernaum were waiting for fesus to return from Gadara, &o bis peo. pie are waiting today fo r. H is re. turn from heaven to earth tbat they may be caught up In tbe rap­ ture and live with him forever. Every real Christian Is waiting for the Master* and are anxious for H is reture. They want to see Him be with Him and worship Him for. ever. Praise H ie bolv name. He Is coming again. Let us patiently waft. His return is very near. w ill serve as pastor of tbe Carra. way Memorial church. The Re­ cord is sorry to lose Mr. McKIn- ney and fa jilly , but wish them well In their new home. We are glad to welcome tLe new pastor of these churcbes. Rev. W. L . Daw son, to our county-^ tbe best sec. tion in North Carolina. Hot Rssfweed■•Hot' ragwcfd. grown in Unl. versUy of Chicago - greenhouses, may make future hoyfever seasons less uncomfortable to the ’’sneeze and wheeze" victims, of the dis. ease than the season that starts this week The pollen from th^ plants Just comins into bloom will he used in experiments .designed for the first time to find out ex ectl.v what happens to the irritating clicrrucais in the pollen when they are taken up by a tfving body Th<> rafwced was successfully grown bv 'I research team headed by Or ft-.M.K Oeiilns. professor and chairman of the university's de parttnent of pharmacology. It Is part’ of a long range research pro-' gram of “ atomic farming*’ in . which compounds from medicinal ly important plants are made ra- dicactive In oi^c'r to trade their ,-Ncise locaticns inside the body. ‘ • Gory SubJfcOl- Ever wonder how tbe coronei in that murder movie estimated the time of death of the victim? Here’s one way It can be done. Subtract the. internal body temperature from 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit, the normal temperature. Divide the ro< suit by 1.9 -This gives the number . of. hours that have elapsed since death. Of course, this isn't com* pletely accurate sincc the amount of clothing anH fat affect the coo], ing rate He liked showing ott, and setoed ^he occasion of dining with seme friends at a restaurant. '*Waltah.” he called In a swag­gering voice, ’'bring me some verulam and ova.”About fifteen minutes later the waiter returned with a plate of bacon and eggs. “Bacon and eggs, sir,'* he ex* claimed. ”In ordinal? English It would be a shilling, but In classical language it costs half a crown. ‘Let the punishment fit the crime,' as we used to say at Oxford. AnytUng else, sir?” NO CURE FOR FOOI« An English M .P. was once ac­ costed by a distinctly drunk Irish­ m an in the lobby of the House of Commons. ’’Sir,” said the Irishman: "Y o u’re a fool.” "Sir," retorted the Englisbman, ”You*re dnm k." ”I m ay be.” replied the Irishman, ”but r u be sober tomorrow, and you'll sUn be a fool.'' CauH Walt "Bobbie,” said Mrs. Tooter to her young offspring. “Daddy and I have arranged that he shall give you a dime every time he Is caught swearing.'* . ^”Gee. that’s, great.” cried the youngster. "W hen Is he going to fix the car?” • Fnaay World This Is a funny world in which we live. When two trabis come together that is caUed a coUision, but when two kids come together, we call them twins. n iS ER RO R An Irishman, an Englishman and a Jew were telling of their strange experiences a: d how they were mistaken for great men;"Would you baylave It," the Irishman said, " I was once mis­ taken for President Coolidge."The Englishman turned to his fellow countryman. "That’s noth­ ing," he said, " I was once mis­ taken for President Hoover.” "Huh?” the Jew said. " I vas standing on the street comer the other day and a cop came along and said to me. ‘Holy Moses, are you here agalnt* ” Smart' Boy Uncle—'‘And what are you ^o- ing to be when you grow up, Freddy?"Freddy—‘T m gotag to be * a phUanthroplst: those - people • al- ■ ways seem to. have such a lot of money.* '_____________ New Version Let me Uve in a house by the ■ side of the road . . . " And sell oil and gas to man. !. I* ':»sJWc Bcaminc a itc'i il of Rtrnn« li»hi ■ Into the dead man's eye the de­ tective saw ihetu. etct:ed on thf' retina, an im as« .tn** K‘l»er*>» face! All that remained •»? to arrest the gut>ty P*>riy Such is the thrilling, ••scicnllllc'' solutvn ot the crime, as gtveii oy some de tective lales and mystery movies U'a .too bad. but il Just Isn't so Yet (here arc enough grains ol truth In the idea lo mal^e it nntind plausible. It is a fact that the out* line of an image can be Imprinted on the rei!na. rnd will remain there so that anotivr person can see it. But for sucl) an image to be recorded, the pupil of the re­ ceiving eye must be wide open and the eye must be exposed, al close range, to a bright light for a minute and a half, or more. But another person, peering into the eye,: can't see the image. The eye must be removed under t yellow sodium light and the retina "ric* veloped" In an alum solution. Books and Bathing Siiitt Have Sofflethine in Commiin "It'S possible that books and bathing suits may have something In common." ;\.ys note^ Duke Uni* versity English Professor Allan H Gilbert. How can they? "Fashions In elothos and fash­ ion in literature have always been mirrors of society," the eminent Renaissance scholar explains, "and il is interesting lo note how the two often reflect similar fca* lures.” Today the similarity seems lo be between the comparative informal­ity of modern dress and the tend­ ency to use' informal every«dny language and events in our modern literature, he says. For example, today's young men and women are much mere sensi­ bly dressed for some activities than their grandparents. After all. Professor Gilbert says, shorts are most suited for tennis, breeches for horseback riding, and so on. And swimming Is certain* ly much simpler without skirts, hose, and shoes.But some of today's clothing is neither very practical nnr very artistic, in Professor Gilbert's opin* Ion. "High heels, many hats, and such garments as slraplct dross­ es are designed in such a way as to deny the very shape of the body,” he says "Somehow, in spite ol the rcia live simplicity of some of rui clothing, we seem detcrmini'd in the long run to gel away from naturalness." But the ladies arc not thi* only ones at fault. "The clothing of men is now sii perlatively ugl ." ho sa s ‘Whai could be more horrible thnn (he knifc'cdgcd creases In troupers which mni'c M nnpcar ihnt mRi> arc incased in flove nlpini; Why. it's an attempt t«i d the very nature of cloth, clothing, and legs " Army Enlists Arctic lee As Ally Against Enemy Arctic ice will be on'e of our strongest allies in World War III. Should It ever come. In this region our armed forces have made a new friend of the ice ' by using huge floats for bases These giant pieces of tee, some covering hundreds of square miles, are practically Indestructible. Their trip through the Arctic Sea. before they float out into other oceans, should take at least five years . . some .may remain in the Arctic for decades. No amount of battering from lesser floes would damage them . . . so stnicturpH m ay safely be built on them , This discovery may give us <. . hours of warning of approaclrnu hostile bombers, bound toward .c**5ia Largest Mostftm coumr> ihe world in \evmi of nesia is the hinge ar«'und which the future of much o f southeast Asia swings Its people tervenMy wish to rcmato neutral In the conflict be* tween Easl and West "Merdeka , meaning irecrimn. has been their ■ allying cry evsr sinc. Ihcy Glared in-lopcndence on the heels ol World War II and began a four- year struggle lo n-ake it stick. Indonc.sta'F ma*n Island Is Java, seal of 11? capiiai, Djakarta, new name for old Balovia Home of more than half ihe nation's people. Java is ihc most crowded region oi its size on earth. Our County .And Social Security Bv W . K . W hite. Manaeer. Old-age and survivors Insurance is the basic rcdremenc and family income protection for 8 out of every 10 paid civilian workers, A rccent survey conducted na tion*wlde revealed that among those families now receiving Fed­ eral old age tns.irance benefits. 30 per cent had no other money in­ come, or lcs« dian $75 per year per person. The survey showed that 72 per ccnr ner year of the retired worlcers on the rolls had other money income of less than $600 a year. Th is pomts out the lireat extent to which retired wor­ kers of today are dependant upon the Federal family insurance pro­ tection provided by the social se­ curity system. Younger workers are more im ­ mediately interested in the death benefit protection provided bythis law. Over 62.3 m illion workers are now fully insured under this system. This means that In the event of the untimely death of these workers or self-employed persons, their surviving children, widows, dependent widowers or dependent parents, would receive cash income. Social securiiy benefits are as. suming a greater importance, in the future planning of all covered workers and self-employed people as borne out by the national sur vey of persons receiving the bene­ fit payments. Therefore, it. Is of the utmost importance that these I individuals protect their insured status by always using but one so­ cial security number. Also, make sure that eaeh and every emyloyer has an accurate record of the name and number shown on your social security card so that all ear­ nings reported for you w ill be I credited to your individual old ‘ age and survivors insurance ac- 'count. j A representative of this ofBce w ill be In M ocksville again on Nov. 26th» at the court house, second floor, at 12t30 p. m ., and on the same date in Gooleemee, ' at the old Band H all, over Led­ ford’s Store, at 11 a. m. Too Many It a germ divides in two every naif hour, -nd all live, how many would (here be at the end 0/ 24 hours? 281.474.976.710,656 Is ihe number. This, Is equal to one mullipllcd by two. Ihe product mulliplied by iwo, that product multiplied by iwo again, and so on 48 limes. The result is called Ihe 4Blh power of 2 Such powers may be calculated bv actually carrying out the tedious mulUpilcaiions. or they may Ix* obtained from nub- lish'Ml 'ot-'"*- t»' nowers. The port also is busy because Tangier has no custom controls- only a twelve and one-half per cent import lax. Almost anything can be brought in or shipped out of Tangier, regardless of imp*'rl and export controls elsewhereIn addition, the city is o m the lew in the world where there arc no currency regulations. Gold, a strictly governed commodlly In most places. **an he traded freely. American gold dollars. British gold sovereigns, and French coins of old issue are legally bouaUl an.i sold, as are the paper currenHrs of the world.Tl:e pert of Tancior is a poly tloi city of Aral's. Jew? Borl p s, «nJ Europeans— center ol Tan gicr iotomallon.il zone wL»' > I " J ulation rstima’.od at 1"-J ' . zone is about four t^r c * - of the D k.rlct of Columb.i. In Alaska Arm y paratrooper Pfc. Vestal L . Seamon, of Route 4* Mocks­ ville, has arrived in Alaska for the huge Arm y A ir Force arctic maneuver,''Exercise Warm W ind" scheduled for Nov. 8-30. A mem* ! ber of the 503rd Airborne Regi- I mental Combat Team of the 11th ' Airborne D ivision, he made the . trip from Ft. Campbell* K y ., by ' air. Scamon entered the Army in January, 1951, and attended jump school at Ft. Benning, Ga. He is a son of M r. and M rs. Lewis Seamon, M ocksville, Route 4. Seea Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. 000000 Lee Lyerly wearing pair of red trousers around ■ town—Herbert Eidson and Robert Basinger lean­ ing on parking merer discussing big landslide—M rs. lohn Vogler doing some rainy afternoon shop- ping^M rs. Roy Holthouser carry ing large vase of manimoth white flowers down Main street—Roy Brown seperating the wheat from the chatf in postoffice lobbv^ Lloyd Farthing and Betty Spencer enjoying cold drinks in apothe* cary shop—Young man wanting to know what had happened to Charlie Halre?—Mrs. Cecil Little busy washing display windows in iewelry score-Aged dtizen re marking chat this town needed a bakery worse than another retail store—M rs. Elmo Foster doing some pre-holiday shoppin'—Miss Sallle Hanes doing some morning shopping in drug store-Haines Yares looking over magazine in furniture store—Bryan Sell busy signing checks- J. C . W illson on his way across che square—Miss Blanche Lagle on her way up the Main highway—B ill LeGrand dis­ cussing recenc landslide co friends in fro iit o f postoffice—Hungry tou«isn from for west pausing at local cafc for lunch - Gilbert At­ wood carrying big cocanitf cake across sidewalk—Miss Margaret Ann Carm cr transacting banking business—Beal Smith carrying big bag of checkerboard feed on his back down Main stre e tM rs. L . M. Graves hurrying down M ain street on chilly morning—Chas. P. lohnson and Harvey Blackwel- der hanging around barber shop trying to get hair cuts—M rs. Eu* gene Seats and Mrs- Harold C . Young doing week-end shopping —M rs. H . C . Jones carrying copy of Blum*s Almanac around the square—Aged woman and legal light walking slowly across high­ way from temple of justice - Miss Mary Heitman buying writing ma­ terial—M rs. Frank Honeycutt in furniture store looking at plat­ form rockers—M rs. Robert Kur* fees and children doing some ear*- ly before Thanksgiving shopping —Miss Mary Jane McCIamrock busy counting $20 bills-W ood­ row Howell hurrying out of post- office lobby—Methodist minister hurrying Into court house bare­ headed on frosty morning—High­ way crowded with farmers haul* ing cotton to Foster’s gin—Piomi- nent Democrat declaring that Har­ ry Truman was a superman — M r. and M rs. Donald Reavis doing some Saturday afternoon shop­ ping - Mr^. Ed Lagle earing great big helping of striped ice cream— Redland ladies purchasing gifts for big evening shower—Gilm er Brewer discussing recent election —B ill Howard playing with toys ini dime store—H . D . Graves haul­ ing big truck load of com down Main street with tractoi—Janice Smoot carrying library books up Main street-Gossip Club hold* ing short afternoon session in front of dry goods store‘ and try­ ing to find out why the city fath* ers let che streets and sidewalks go unswept, unhonored and un­ sung these lovely fall days. The Gift Shop M RS. C H R IS T IN E .W . D A N IE L Shoaf Coal & Sand Co. We Can , Supply Tiour Needs IN GOOD C O A L. SAN D and B R IC K C all or Phone U s A t Any Time PH O N E 194 Fonnecly Davie Brick StCoal Co - A PAOE TWO THE DAVIE RECORD. MOCKSVILLE. N. C . NOVEMBPR 19, 1962 THE DAVIE RECORD. Have Died A Correction C . FR A N K STR O U D , E D IT O R . TEIEPHONE Dnterad attbs Postofflce InMockB- Tllle, N . C„ M Second-clBBii Uall m atter, March 3 ,1.90S. SUBSCWPTION RATES; OMK YEM<. iN N. CAROLINA $SIX MONTHS IN N. CAROLINA • 75r. ON FYEAR. OUTSIItRRT^TK • M M SIX MONTHS. OUTRIDE STATR • $1.00 "IF MY PEOPLE. WHICH ARE CALLED BY MY NAME. SHALL HUMBLE THEMSaVES, AMD PRAY. AND SEEK MY FAa AND TURN AWAY FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THBl WIU I HEAR FROM HEAVEN. AND WILL FORGIVE THEIR SINS. AND WILL HEAL THEIR UND.".. 7 CHRON. 7iR _____________ The Record wishes to thank the 3,450.000 Democrats and Inde­ pendents who helped to elect General Ike in the recent land* sUdc. We don't won't to hear anv of our Democratic friends cusslne General Ike. Seems like most of them in this neck of the woods voted for the General. General Ike's majoritv In Dnvie Countv was about double that re­ ceived by Republkans on the Re­ publican county ticket. We have decided that the voters did like Ike . Thanksgivins day is Thurday of next week. The various orphan< ages in the State are asking for contributions to assist them in their grent work of c.iring for the fartheriess and motherless child Ten. A ll are urged to donate to the ofpKanages as the Lord has p^^spered you during tiie past year. Contributions^ large or small w ill be much appreciated. Ellis President The North Carolina Baptist State Convention, in session at the First Baptist Church in Wins ton-Salem last week» elected D r. Archie E llis, pastor of First Bap­ tist Church, Salisbury, President for the coming year. The Con­ vention w ill m eet.nex( year in Greensboro. More than 2,000 m inisters and messengers attend ed the three day convention, which came to a close Thursday at'noon. Home on Leave Clarence L . Poole, A . D. A . N ., o f the U . S. Navy, is spending a lO^dav leave with his parents, M r. and M rs. E . D. Poole, of Harm­ ony, Route 2. Clarence has bi^en in the Navy since December, 1951. He has been going to school tak­ ing training for an airplane me* chanicr He w ill leave Tuesday to report at Corpus Chrlsti* Texas for duty. W ith the death of Thomas C . M irchcll, 33, of near Farmington* who lost his life on Saturday night» Nov. 8th, at Advance, when his car» runnig at a speed of 100 m iles an hour, left the highway and turned over, 8 persons have lost their lives in Davie Countv in auto wrecks this year. Th is is a fearful loss of life for a small countv like Davie. Just what can be done to reducc the death toll is not known. The Record has given much space to this subject. The m ajority of wiecks is caused by fast and reckless driving. Drive cari'ful and save a life—maybe your own. Pfc. Charlie Bailey, son of M r a d M rs. Carl Bailey of this city, arrived hom recently from Korea, where he spent a year. He went to Fort lackson. Columbia, S. C , Friday, where he received h i s honorable discharge after two years service with Uncle Sam. In the Davie Dry Goods Co., advertisement which appeared in our issue last week we should have said Coveralls $5.00 up«. in* stead ot overalls, $5.00 up. The overalls are $2.98 up. The ad also read you can save money by bring* ing vour shoes h^re, when it should have have read, “ Buying your shoes here.^’ i We )iave just received a ship ment of land posters, printed' on good board. If you need any, bet ter call at The Record office be- , fore the supply is exhausted. Notice to Creditors Having qualified as Admlnistra* trix of the estate of W . F. Vogler, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons holding claims agaii.st the estate of said deceased to pre­sent the same, properly verified, before the undersigned at Ad­ vance, N C „ on or before the I5th day of November, 1953, or this notice w ill be plead in bar of re* covery. A ll persons indebted to said estate w ill please call upon the undersigned and n-.ake prompt settlement. Th is l5th day of No­vember, 1552. M A RY M . V O G LER , Adm rx. of W . F. Vogler, Decs’d. Wanted To Buy Your Lespedeza Se id. We Will Pay High­ est Market Price See Us Before You Sell. M c l l a m r o c k S e e d C o ., Plione 307 Depot Street CH IN A DINNER SETS 32 pc. service for six 35 pc- service for six 53 PC. service for eight 33 1-3 to 40% DISCOUNT THIS IS HIGH GRADE C IN A MADE AT OLD SAUM A FIN E G IFT FO R M O THER ON T H A N K . G IV IN G Come in And See Tiiis FINE CHINA Mocksville , Hardware Company F ir s t I n T lie F i e l d Farmall A SIZE F o r E v e r y N e e d . R a n k i n - S a n f o r d I m p l e m e n t C o . Phone 96 Mocksville, N.C. TB B DAVIB RKCORD, M OCKSVILLE. N. C. NOVEMBER 19.1 PAGE TIIRE Patronize The Record’s advertisers. G. A. Crenshaw Grey A llen Crenshaw, 89, died Friday morning at the home of- his son, Charles R . Crenshaw, on ■ Salisbury street, ioliuwing an ex-' tended illness. i Surviving are two sous. Chas. R . Crenshaw, ot this city, and H, W . Crenshaw, ot Komioite, Va. M r. Crenshaw’s wife died in 1951. Funerai servicu^i were lielU at the home at 3 [i. in. Saturday, w ith Rev W . mg and Rtv. ) P. Duvis unJ the body laid to re«i m Kose ceme­ tery. To the biTeaved family The Record extetld.s livm pjciiy in this k ju r i f bereavcm.nt. Mrs. Lula Rene^ar M rs. Lula Rcneuar, 86, of Har­ mony, Route 2, died Ti^utsday m om ins at the MoclcsviHe Nurs­ ing Home, following u serious ill­ ness of two weeks. Funeral services were held at Sm dy Springs Baptist Church at 2:30 p. m. Saturday, with Rev. H . W . Hutchens and Rev. E, W . Turner officiating, and the body laid to rest in the church cemetery. Surviving are * three sons, one brother and three sisters. Her huebwd died in 1940. . | Q M a y W e i n t r o d u c e A 1 D a v i s T e l e v i s i o n Mocksville’s Newest TV Center Wallace Building In Mocksville G r a n d O p e n i n g FREE GIFTS For A ll The Kiddi-^s A 1 D a v i s T e i e v i s i o n Complete T V Sales And Service Satisbuty Mocksville M r . t k t o r i s . There's bcjn a 1st if K'.YSTEP.Y cbsii( thii wheel cligning busine.is—a lot cf technical telk about such lliiros C5 "eomber," "costcr," "tos-in" c::d'ct!-.cr terms to explain wfcy yc-^r cuinmoljilc steers hard or wears out tirss cr. fact cs you can buy new ones. VJ'e don't bcV.cvs in ghosts or mycfe.'-y stsries. and li st's why we've instclled a nsw Jc!in Econ yiSUALINER in our Stscri.ig Service Department. The VISUALINER is the firrt were ever seen that molias driving cssicr and safer by hornesslng bccms of li:;lif. Checks wheel alignment quic^r-as-a-f.nr'i and projects a "picture" on o screcn eo that you can see for voiirsalf vfhet'.ier your car needs attention. It's no secrct thct faulty wheel alignment con causa "var.- ‘dering," "road weave" and other l::rd steering symptoms. So, drive in todoy t nd let the VISUALINER show you wh:thir vour automobile is right for the rood. P e n n i n g t o n C h e v r o l e t C o . I n c . Phiu c 156J Mocl£5vUle, N . C . You Can Depend on A Square Deal when you buy a P I A N O or O B G A X at JtESSB C . B O W EN M V S IC C O . nationally famou* • H A M M O N D O RGAN S • G R AN D PIAN O S • SPIN ET piA N O S. • UiSED PIAN O S Term . 217 WEST FIFTH ST. --------- .....ku ' WmSTONrSALeM, R. C. THE DAVIE RECORD. CNdwt Paper In The Coiinly No Liquor, Wine, Beer A<I> NEWS AROUND TOWN. Bryan Sell spent Wednesday in High Point on biuineaa. Leslie Daniel spent Tuesday in Charlotte anendine a clothinn show. George W . Rowland made a business trip to Greensboro last Thursdav. _ M r. and M rs. A rthur A llen, of Denton, were M ocksville visitors Wednesdav. FO R REN T—Some rooms. M RS. R . L . W A LK ER . Frank Stroud, }r ., is spending a day o t two this week in Washing* ton, D. C. B M r. and M rs. Roland Sunley, who have been living on W ilkes, boro street moved last week to W inston.Salem . ■ M r. and M rs. Robert Hend­ ricks and children spent several days last week with relatives in W ashington, D . C . M arvin W aters, who has been seriously ill for more than six wec£s, is some better, his friends w ill be Klad to kaow. M rs. J . B . W hidey, M r. and M rs Tom W hitlev and children, of Thom asville, were recent Ruests of M rs. R . L . W alker. Society Meets I doK. See Jack FeimsterV Harmony, N . C ., R . 2. M r. and M rs. R . B . Forrest and children, of Woodleaf, were in town shoppibg Tuesday and paid our office a pleasant visit. M iss LilUe Meconey returned home Wednesdav after spendmg some time w ith her sister, M rs. John Hodees, at Lexington. Nearly one inch of rain fell in this sccdon last week, which was badly needed. .I t was the first rain in more than three weeks. M rs. W . M . Pennington w ill go to Asheville this wM k, where she w ill spend some time w ith her mother, M rs. Frank Poindexter. R e v.'J. P . Davis spent last week assisting Rev. H . W . Hutchens in a revival meeting at Sandv Springs Baptist Church in Yadkin County. M rs. Jack E llio tt and two little sons, o f Shelby, spent Wednes­ day in town, guests of Mrs* E l­ liott's parents, M r. and M rs. L . E . Feezor. £ . C . M orris moved his real es state , office last week inra his modem new brick office building located next to Allisonjohnson C o ., on Salisbury street. If you want a-1953 Blum ’s A1 manac, call at The Record office; They are fm to all old and new subscribers who subscribe or* re­ new their subscripdons. A . A . W ^ oner, who has been taking treatment at Davis Hospit­ al, Statesville, for the past seven weeks, Is much better, and is ex­ pected home earlv this week, his many friends wUI be glad to learn. R . C . Basinger, Lester Richic and Hubert Boger returned Wed nesd.y night from St. Louis, M o., where they spent two days at tlu- Purina Research Farm and Labn tory. *^ ey report a wonderful trip, with much new Information gained. The Thanksgiving turkey din­ ner ^ven by the ladies of the Eastern Star Thursday evening in the Masonic h all, was a- success in evenr way and a neat sum was realized. Nearly two hundred en joyed the dinner which consisted of turkey with all the trimmings. was ramoimg around town Satur> h dav and dropped into our office. “ Hiom ^ead' Dewey TuttT^^rwho is doing “ ^ X a v s " '” ’ some road construction work at Greenville, S. C , was In town Sat* urdav on b u s in g jW ANT ADS PAY. W . H . Clay Lawson, who lives = = ^7. = = = ^ = in the dassic shades of Fulton, beyond the village of Fork, paid _>ur office a pleasant visit Thu«- p o R S A L E -B a rb e W ire & day. M r. Lawson is a native of Galvanized Roofing.. East Tennessee, but came to Da- Milier-Evans Hardware Co. vie Coun^ a^ u t six years ago p o R SALE-Hom e-m ade mo- and pu^ ased a small form. He lasses. See Harmon McMahan, travels for a radio and television' Mocks^^Ile, Route 2. supply house in Winston-Salem. I p o R R EN T—Two real nice rooms; one room free of charge. , See M rs. 1. D . Frost, M ocksville, j Route 2. The November n .« tin ^ o f the, pOR SA LE- 1 p ,ir good ra S it Farmington Methodist Women s dogs, guaranteed. 1 Redbone op* Society of Christian Service met ‘ posum ’ - - . - - Thursdav at the home of the pre-' sident, M rs. Leon Foster, with ^ Anyone wishing to work as „ M rs, D . K . Bennett as assistant nurse’s aid, between ages of 1845, hostess, ' I white, apply at M ocksville Nursing Mn,. a a Brock the open- ______________ ing prayer. Then followed the- FO R S A L E -4 Room House program directed by M rs. Ben with bath, hot water, wired for S m i* Then the hymn '‘O Zion ‘ "g lo lE S E ^ a ^ M ES. Haste,” was sung. The theme - phone 30l'W was “ By A New and Uving W ay.” , ^— r lThie uraa niaaPntPfl »«un taltre ^ FO R SA LE“ 30*aCre fftrm, with Th is w^ presented in two ttlk s, 4.foom house. Cood water and the topics of which were: "Fm d bam. A ll land in cultivation. 2 in ; a Mother,” which told of a miles north of M ocksville, on Mud converted native African becom* M ill road. T . P . Dwiggins, ingthe"m other*»toalarge num- _______________Mocksville ,N .C . ber of babies in a home for foun* FO R SA LE - Forty-six-acre farm dling babies; the second topic, with a 6-room block house, and a A ttheG ate,” is abojt the imi- **'*;«^room farm house widi barn grations^tion in San Francisco where the matron, a member of is on hard-surface Jericho-Cjolee- the Women's Society, cares for mee Highway. For p .rticulars call the stranded and worried foreign^ or write, ers who are waidng for their pa- Vnpers to be cleared for admission ______________M ocksville. Route 4. to the United States. i . W A N TED — E^erienced ma- K in ley Steele, about 60, well- known Negro, of Route 4* was se- riouiily injured about 7 o’clock last [ Wednesday evening, when his truck- and a transfer truck from Florida collided near Liberty Methodist Church, on the Salis­bury Highway. Steele was carried to Rowan Memorial Hospital in an Baton Funeral Home ambul- was the week-end guest of M iss' Cook-Kimhle : | Cominq Home j Jessie Libbv Stroud. | In a ceremony at her home on W ith The 1st Caval v D iv. In Attorney Avalon H all left Sun- m o S n ftN S v.’ ‘l"'hV M «." Ro“e G . Wooten, day night on a business trip to Owen Kim ble became the bride son of M r. and M rs. Robert G. Washington, D . C | of G . N . Cook, of Forsyth _oun- Wooten, Route 1, Harmony, N .'— I tv. Rev. W . Q. Grigg w u the of- C ., is returning to the U . S. under W . G . Booe, ofYadkin Countv, ficiatjng m inister. ' , • ; -1 the Army’s rotation program after was rambling around town Satut- fo,* *eir*Sl’V ^ ” ' I I, Fla. They w ill go V 1-'^ Caval-v“ ■ p ivisio n , which spent 17 months in the front lines of Korea before being assigned to security duty in Insurance FREE! japan late In 1951. Corporal Wooten, who has been' “V erily 1 say unto you, except ye be converted and become as serving as a cannoneer with the little children, ve shall not enter into die kingdom of heaven."82nd Field A rtillery Battalion, . . «. spent six months in Korea with 5- Jm u* unto him , 1 am the this unit and has been awarded wav, the truth and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by the Combat Infantrym an Badge, Me.” John, 14:6. “ But the scripture hath concluded all under sin.” Korean Service Ribbon w iih three . , , , , . , ' campaign stars and U N Service Ribbon.! God.” Rom. 3:23. We must all realize heaven is a prepared place for prepared people. A rc you prepared? Read M att. 25:1, also John 14:1'7, and M att. 6:14- To all people that do not go to church, please let’s start going re­ gularly to preaching and Sunday school, too. Go to the church of your choice, but please go to every service eveiy Sundav, and to the people who have their names on the church books and the Sunday school rolls, Iet*s all cry to please God more and to do H is w ill better by coming back to Sunday school^and let's all stay for preaching service, and come back for night service. W on't you say to yourself and to God that from this day on. you won't let the devil keep you from Sunday school or preaching, and come seeking to hear the word of God and to get a blessing out of hearing H is truth pro­ claimed. Let’s keep God's Sabbath day holy and build up all chur­ ches in Davie County. Be sure and read Isa. 58:13-14. Princess Theatre TH U R SD A Y & FR ID A Y “ U N TA M ED FR O N TIER ,” in Technicolor, with Joseph Cot- ten and Sallv W inters. Comedy and News SA TU R D A Y "H A W K O F T H E W ILD R IV E R ,” with Charles Starrett and Smiley Burnette. Serial &. Cartoon M O N DAY & TU ESD A Y “T H E B IG S K Y ,” with K irk Douglas and Elizabeth Threatt. News, i •K IT W ED N ESD AY CARSO N ,” with Hall Cartoon Jon UAVIE COUNTY'S BIGGES1 6HUW VALOE ADM )2cauil39i! Liberty Methodist Cliurch at Epliesus, W ELCO M ES O N E AN D A L L . The Record has the larqest white D o Y o u R ead 1 he R ecord? circulation ot any Davie paper. In the business session the pre-J _____ii_ j r______1 ___t____1.1__reiiaoie gins,goodvotsident called for and reviewed the III train Also like to various officers, cutter and pattern marker. Apply M O N tEIG H GARM EN T CO .M ocksville. N . C. reports of the The supply chairman, M rs. Bur­ ton Seats, asked for additional clothing and suitable groceries for shipment to Korea, be brought in at once. M rs. G . C . Graham gave information from the Conference chairman of promotion who was calling for increased membership in all the local societies. An item of great interest to the society was the announcement that Miss Lorena K elly, a missionary for manv vears to the Belgian Congo in A frica, is to give an ad­ dress at Farmington Methodist Church on Sundav, Nov. Z3, at 11 o'clock. Members from the other nearby societies .are expected to attend to hear Miss K elly. young man to train as WANTED Milling W heat W IL L PA Y D ELIV ER ED O UR P L A T if O R M s $2.15 per bushel for ordinary low protein varieties m illing wheat haying test weight of 59 lbs. or betrer. $2.35 per bushel for Adas van ety havmg protein content of 12^% testing 58 lbs. per bushel. Send sample of Adas wheat ■ for protein determination be­ fore making delivery. * SutesTill. Fl.iir Mill. and coffee. Statesville, N . C . T o T h e V o t e r s O f D a v ie C o u n t y I wish to express my appreciation for the loyal support that the peo pie of Davie County gave me on November 4th, for County Com missioner, and in return,. I will strive to serve the people of . Davie County in a fair and impartial manner. R . P . M a r tin Mocksville, N. C. ThanK^ving W e C a n S u p p l y Y o u r N E E D S With Everything It Takes To Make Thanksgiving A Day Long To Be Remembered Turkeys, Hens, Fryers, Pork Hams And Shoulders, Fish, Oysters, Cranberries, Celery, Lettuce, Pumpkins, Oranges, Apples, Cocoanuts And A Full Line Of Frozen Foods D O Y O U R SHO PPIN G E A R LY A U i s o n r J o h n s o n C o m p a n y Phone 111 ' Salisbury Street ........., . y . . PAGE EOUR THB DAVIK ltm)RI], MUCKSVILLK N. U. NOVSMHESR 19 1062 BY'DR. KENNETH’J. FOREMAN 5 ^ S ? 4 '® ^ 'L " “ilgru.5!o,XltUW. Thanking God Lesson for Novemlior 23,19S* I u r rorem an T 15 hard to imagijte Josus ob*serving exnctly one day. In the year, no more, os a Thanksgiving day. This is not to say that the idea 0/ a ThnnksfilvlnB Day is a bad one. The Jews of ancient limes, whose religious observances Jesus closely kept, had a whole week of celebra­ tions in the fall, corresponding somewhal to our ThanksBivJng day. But Jesus’ heart of gratitude was not to be Umited by the calendar. M istnkcs A b otit T itnnksgtving There or« at (cost three mistakes which are commonly made wJWj reference lo Thanksgiving day. Wo Christian people make the miS' take of limiting our ihoiigltts of gratitude to one day. We count our blessings on this one day of all the year; wo go on a kind ol "binge" of gratl* tudo. Another sort ot ”’“w .even of those who are called Cl>rls- tlans. Is to use the day for purposes [hat have nothing at all to do witb wnrBhijjful gratitude to God for his blessings of the year past, the day is commonly used by many tor cnting ioo much or for getting drunk at fooibnJl games. * day lo ushei-in Ihe Christmas season. In fact, not M many years ago the com­ mercial intarests of the country were Bueces.sfjjl Jn pushing the day back a whole week just In order to have a longer season In which to sell 'Christm as" merchandise. But the purpose of the day Is not to make money or to win tootbn)! games or to got stulTcd with turkey.• • * • G rncc Before Shnkcspcare third mistake Is to be thankful lo r on}y one kind ot thing} namely, m aterial blessings such as food, se­curity, good crops and good busl- ness. Now our Lord was grateful for such things. More than once wd read of Mb taking bread and giving thanks for It. B ut as he knew that m an docs not livo by bread alono «o m an sliould not givu thajjka for bread alone. Most of Jesus’ prayisrs of thanksgiving are for other and higher blosi^ings. Some well-known writer once commented on our custom of say­ing “Grace before m e a f—the old expression for what la now often caMed “askteg the WossJng’' at the table. Has God no other blessings for us? When a person aits down with a great play <say by Shakespeare) in his hand, why not a “Grace be­fore Shakespeare?" How many of us have a little prayer of thanks* giving before reading a book of iw tr y or going out to look up at the starry sky on a clear night, or be­fore opening a letter from an old friend or before going to the hos­ pital or the dentist? (Yes, indeed;dentist may not seem like a blessing, but try to stand a tooih- ache all by yourself, or try to Im ­ agine golrtg to hie office, ar io the hospital, before the days of modern medicine, surgery. X-rays, anes­thetics and sanilatloni)• • • Blessing s of the SpirU J « u « ' prajTjr of thanksgiving. Which our lesson Scripture rccords, however, is on a higher plane still, p ie particular blessing for which he thanks the Lord of heaven and earth is in tho first place a spiritual one, and in the second place it is not something that came to him but to some one else. He thanks O od.that a spiritual light has been seen by bis most bumble friends. Can We say that many of prayers are on this high level? ftUny of us never get beyond the QJm m e’* stage. And even among those who do rise to the level of real thanksgiving. It is rare enough to find those who are grateful not only for their own blessings but for thM e received by others? and how seldom does God hear any note of praiM for blessings of the splrltl ‘th is is a high plane, to be reached only by high souls, those who. have been iiHimate enough with. Christ to absorb his spirit and altitude. Stupid people, who do not have very good minds, cannot be expected to appreciate blessings of tte jn ind ; and people with sm all and wizened souh cannot feel blessings of the spirit. And only those who practice the Golden Rule every day, so as lo pul themselves into others' places, and who culti­ vate ihe gift of sympathy so as to “rejoice with those that rejoice and. weep w ith those that weep," can have the heart to be thankful when others receive the highest bless- 'ngs of heaven. Anidfnts Kill More Youne Than Any Single Disease AccMints nre a greater Ibrcal to the Uvea of young children than •tty single disease. D r. George iVI Wheattsy. New York pedialriclan, f i S t h *" Today’s ‘'Accidents klU about 6.000 chil­dren between the ages of one and four every year," Dr. Wheatley reiwrted. ‘'The natural drive in children to expJore ihe bright new world, to put objecu in their mouth and to clim b and run about all combine with immaturity of body and m ind and Inadequate parental teaching and supervision to con­tribute to this appftlling loss of young Jives. ■•Ftiller understanding of child behavior, greater use of minor in* Juries as learning experiences, and keener awareness of the accidents likely to occur arc guides to par* ents in 'immunizing* the preschool child against serious injury or un­ timely death.’*He cited' the experience of an insurance company. Detwecn IflM and 1947, the death rate of insured children tmder five from all dis­ eases combined declined 70 per cent. The accldcnt death rate dropped only 23 ;M>r cent. "The chief weapon against the common childhood diseases has been immunizatfon,'’ Dr. Wheattcy said. **Agaln.<st accldcnls. the m ain weapon Is education—particularly of parents."Motor vehicle mishaps, he said, are ihe most common cause of rttal injuries, with burns a close recond. Drowning, fallF and poi.^on- ing arc other m ajor causes, witb almost half of these accidents oc­ curring in or around the home. Painting Isn’t as Easy As It Looks to Beginner Painting is something almost anyone can do—about 60 per cent of all householders have taken to pushing their own paint brushes. But as any person who has botched up a home paint job can testify, painting Isn’t as easy as it looks. There are rules to follow and pitfalls to avoid. A common mistake Is to paint when the weather is too hot or too damp. Authorities advise that Pall is the best Ume ot the year for painting. They say the weather then is most likely to be cool and dry.Since using the right tools makes any job easier, the amateur palnt- ei would do well to give careful thought to Ihe selecUon of fils paintbig equipment.Paint Is ol first importance It pays to buy good quality paint that is made especially for the type of surface on which ?t Is to be applied.Other painting eouipmenl norm* Insurance ciaiises, periods of nraee, IS anything b<8.*:|d6s the house in­ cluded as security, can changes be mtuU In the house without the consent of the lender, etc. It is normal ihat once you sec the house of your dreams you want to be cosily installed In It. but he warns about over eagerness lo the extent of becoming blind to the mortgage requirements. Reeling Silk Reeling the »ilk is the process of unwinding It fron the cocoon, onto silk reels . . . a process whlcli has undergone many refinoments but no essential changes since the days of Hsi-Iing-shl. Hot water. In basin«;, is still used to melt the serl- cin. to make It possible to unwind the cocoon. A single silk filament is far too fine for reeling, so sev­eral cocoons are unwound at the same time. and. as they bob about together in the basin, their fila­ ments are drawn together. By a simple 5y.<;tem of pulleys, the fila­ments are drawn through a tiny porcelain eye. and the melted serl- cin, which glued the cocoon, now glues ihe silk filaments Into a single thread. This thread passes over a couple of pulleys to double back on itself for a twist that wrings out any remaining water, and then on lo (he reel. <It is later rc-reeled and twisted Into skeins). By this time, the sericln has hard­ ened. and the silk thread has a Miff, halr-like leel. The sericln will be boiler: off. eilher before or after weaving, to uncover the natural beauty of the silk. Woman's Heart A woman’s heart, i^opular songs notwlthstnndiiiR. is not as vulner­able as we have been led to be­ lieve. The An'icrican Heart Assn. re|)orts that for the past 20 years the heart disease death rate has t>een on the decline for women and on the rise for men Thcr«; Is no greater danger, however, for men or women, of dying from heart disease today than there v/as 50 years ago. The increased numbers are due, the association says, part­ ly to the aging population and part­ly to improved diagnosis (many heart disease deaths ot 50 years ago were unrecognized as such). Keeping Watermelon C>ut watermelon tends to develop a rubbery surface and dry out If left in your refrigerator without adequate moisture-prbtectlon. And everybody knows what happens when the noble cantaloupe is re- frigerated without a jacket. Pretty thing . . . but w hat an odor! So , here's a thought: press a sheet of ^ moisturejiroe/ freezer cellophane r’ against the cut surface of your 1 m*1on. and tape the edges back i against the Btdn with cellophane tape. TU» holds aroma and mols. .)m iM M tf iU E S S :------------ C f lO n ilD P02ZIE ACROSS I. Biblical namen. Blunders 0. God of love (Gr.)10. A way of stepping11. Fellows12. Bestows II. l^lcasure la iln .)15. ERM>tlan god 17. Songbird 18. Portion of a curvc<{ line 20. mcctrlc street car22. Period of Ihnc 21. Solemn wonder25. .Vf>ttllieast (abbr.) 2G. Tools to enlarge holes 20. PuMic notice ni.A lltilc lie 32. Howl aj). Fills njjaln as. C;ii««chin n)i»s:key 39. River (Eng.) 40. An age 4H. Whether 43. Removes (Print.)45. Sew loosely 47.TilU‘ of rcRpt'cl Cry of t‘3cch an als 4 •. I'ln v th ln g s S(*. SplitDOWN’1. RC‘Ciu{(lf.y It. Vehicle 21. Te be in debt 33.PlB«e wher* crude material ta reflned S7. Trouble T.CompeUtor 38.Dlatresa lAsr w m i l y . j i j ’j □!! 'j'iii[iC 2 a a 1--2 tJ'.'JfJu l ■’I ’ □MQUOaULl a a n n o FOR THE FINEST COAL FO R O R A TES, STO V ES, FU R N A C E AN D STO K ER S It WUl Pay You To Call O r Phone U s. Let Us Furnish Your Fuel O il We Make Prompt Delivery Mocksviiie Ice & Fuel Co. Pohnc 116 M ocksviiie, N . C Your sons or daughters who are away a i college would like to read The Davie Record. Only $1 for the school term Rosy Rice Ring Good With Eggs Rosy Rice Ring (Servea M ) m caps rice 214 enps tomato Juice 2 teaspoons salt % cup ripe olives IH cups grated sharp Amer> lean cheese H cup thinly sliced celery ii cop llilnly flliced onion t tablespoons chopped green sweet pepper M cap chopped parsley li cup chopped pimento Wash rice, add tomato juice and salt and heat to boiling.* Cover closely and cook over very low heat 20 to 25 minutes, until liquid le absorbed and rice is tender. Cut olives from pits into large pieces. Stir olives, cheese, green vegetables and plmiento lightly into hot rice with a large fork Pack into oiled S-Inch ring mold or a loaf pan. Bake In a moderate t.ino F.) oven 10 to 15 minutes'. Unmold onto serving plaie. Serve with crcamed eggs, or any desired sauce. Tamnie Pie (Serves 6} Filling:1 pound ground beef I large onion, chopped 1 can tomato soup 2 cups water ; 1 teaspoon salt ^ teaspoon pepper 1 tnhlcsjtoon chill powder 1 cup whole kernel corn (drained) Ji cup chopped green pepper Topping: Vt cun corn meal I tablespoon flou- 1 tablespoon sugar 114 ieaspoons baking powder K teaspoon salt 1 beaten egg iit cup m ilk 1 tablespoon melied shortening hiotice to Creditors Hating qualiliei] na Executor of che eatute uf F. li . Bahnson, de­ ceased, notice is hereby given (o ttll t>crsons hoUHng chums nRuit st said estate to present the same, properly vcriited, to the under' signed at Cooleemee» N C .. on or before the 30th day of September, 1953, or this notice w ill be plead in bar of recovery. A ll persons indebted to said estate w ill please make prompt settlement. This 30th day of September, 1552.CH A S. F BAHNSO N, Exr. of F . M. Bahnson, Decs'd. Brown ground beef and onion in ixlon of this rice ring comes from the to­ mato juice in which the rlee la eooked. It may be served with e r e a m e d eggs or meat, sparked with a garnish of ripe olives. L tT US DO Y O U R ^ O B P R I N T I N G We can save you money on your ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, STATEM ENTS, POSTERS, BILL H EADS, PACK ET H EADS. Etc. Patronize your home newspaper and thereby help build up your home town and county. THE D A V IE REeORD. . F a r m e r ! SF E US FOR Self-Propelled Corn Pickers, Drills, Used or new, or for anything you need in Farm Machinery. V/e can rave you money. Hendrix & W ard W IN STO N -SALEM H IC H W A Y O p p o r l i i i i i t ^ ^ ^ K M c k s IftEAD Uic AIM , NEW MONEY lOR YOUR OLD THINC8 I W . ■l. yA .T .o lfc IM B « , « ■ W aaM • ! * 4 w k n r 4 » in iwa Ncwsp*m ^ ♦ FO R RENT ♦ SPACE IN THIS PAPER Will Arranse To Suit G OOD NEIGHBORS-PWCES TO Fir yOUR BUSINESS T h e D a v i e R e c o r d Has Been Published Since 1899 5 3 Y e a r s O th e r, h sve com e and gone-your county new spaper keeps Roing. Som etim es it has seem ed hard tn m abe "b u cltle and tongue" m eet, but soon the sun shines and we m arch on. O u r fa ith fu l su b scrib ers m ost of whom pay prom ptly, g ive us courage and abiding fa ith in our fellow m an. If your neighbor is nut talcing Th e Record te ll him to su b scrib e. T h e p rice is only $ I.SO per vear in the State , and $2 0 0 in other states. W hen You Come To Town Make O ur Office Your Headquarters. W e Are Alwavs Glad To See You. The Davie Record DA.ViiE C O U N T Y ’S O L D E S T W B W S P A P E R - T H E P A P E K T H E P E O P X .E H E A D = '---------------- “IttltE SHAU. THE THE PEOPLE'S ftiCHTS MAINTAIN, UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BV CAIN." V O L n M N L I I I .W O Cieavn.LBj,;w O RTH C A R O U N A . W BDNHSDAY NOVEM BER NEWS OF LONG AGO. What Was Happening In Da> rie j'*f>re P.ikin^ Meters And Abbreviated Skirit. (D»»te Kecoid, No*. * j, 1917) W . B . Bobson, S r., ot SsUs. bory. was In town Thursdsy. M r. nnd M ts. O . 6 . Ijsm cs, ot CoolMinee. were lit town last week sbopplne. M. B . Bsliey who lives to t^e, cUssIc stiades of River H ill, was In town one day Inst week. „ Attorneys John C. Wallace and Frank Hanes, of Winston-Salem, and Walter B Brock, of Ashe ^ ro . were amonc-the out-of-town law ren here lant week. The case of TJlss Charlotte Pos-j ter.agalnst R . J . RevnoWs Tobsc. CO Co.. for Injuries received while woFklac ta the factory, was tried W last week; : Mbs Foster waa awarded (lOiOOOi W ; T . Daywalt, of Kapoa, was • In town last week on his wav home from Wlnston Salem where hie had carried tobscco. He got so aver, age of more than 31 cents a t»i)nd and said food tobacco was brinii. Ing a fair price. C«pl. M. J . Holthonser had the mlsfortooe 10 itel two of bis finm rs cut off with a wood saw last Wed­ nesday aftetnoon. The saw outfit cauKblon Ere and Mr. Halthoaseri WM trying to get It fnrther away from the hoiMW when the accident occarred. Col. W. K . Clement was carried to Long's Sanatorium. Statesvlllr, Tbnrsdar lo untferRo treafment. Col. Clement has been In decllnlne health for some lime and became much worse last week. .bscsr Lee Madden, of States- vllie and M'ss Myrtle M en, of n w ■Fork Chnrcb. were united In marriage lo the ReelMcr of need* oiBce In this d tv Wednesday morn lug, Rav. E . M. Avett oerformlne tbe marriage ee^mouy. The bap- oy coaple left ■'Immediately after the marriage for their home In Statesville;-' - Mrs. Emma G riffin, of Wlustou. Salem, and Miss Rrae .Owen, of this d ty, who teaches In Wlnstor-! . Salem, were victims of a had anto- moblte wreck Saturday momloi' which occnrred on ibit Hleh Point road. The ladle« were passenger* on a Caniel City bns, which ran oB the hard-!sarface road atid turned over. Mrs. GrHBti was seriously InjtiTed and was catrlid to Baptist Roosfdtal where she remains io critical condition. Miss Owen re-1 ceived only slight firuises and wns able lo come home.' Mrs. Griffin is s former resident :of this city, and was on her way to Colorado 10 visit her hrotlicr when the accident occnrred. Mr. Winiara H . Smith died Monday. Nov 14th at the home of his danghter. M rs.| C. M. Mc- , Wnney at Farmington, aged 6.1 ^ r e . The funeral services were held at Farmington Tnesday after- hmh at .-i o’clock, and the hbdv laid to rest In Rose cemetery with liissonlc honors. Mr. Smith is sur. ylved hy oiie son and two dangh- tsVs, one brother and two sisters and many relatives and friends. Hejllved in M.wfcsvllle for msny yeiM , and was loved and respected bjr'.all who knew him. ..,: The following jurors' have heen drawn for the December term of Davie Superior court, with Judge M iElrev presiding: R , C. Koonts, ' j ; L . Ward. H . G..Hendricks, M. Reavla, J , W . Davwalt, O. R . afoud, N . B. Dvson, I . L . Ijames, Ghal Heeler, W . S . Hottthit. P . K .: .Smith, C . S . Eaton. M , H i Collette, I . H . Nance, I . H . Bean, champ, W . T . Myers. J . F . Wvatt lin d j Baijey. Do you read The R«coril? Ihe Moral Integri­ ty Of The Old School Rev. Walter E. Itenboar. TaTtorsvllle. N. C T btttkloK back to. tbe old school o f fifty yeARt niro, and even more, there Are Kome ih lne s I tttialt never foreel. Tt true tb a t our scboot htiildlnefi then were no{ far Inferior to th e b a lid in e o f today, and onr edticational nvatem then wn« qnlte l<11ffere«tt tn th a t of th e present, h n t we had a > te h standard of moraia th at has never been anrpaased as the decades have com e and eone. W e were ta tic h t th a t hon^atv, fn . tecrftv, clean Hvlnsr m orally, no.: b te 'ch a ra c te r.' itnhHme manhoo*f and w om anhood, eodiiness and ri^ h fe o 'K ii^ V were fa r more to h< desiredtand aonehl after th an edii- caMon.^ ' W e were d e e plr fm pres*. ed w ith th e fact th a t.n to ra l and aolrltnar InteirH ty were far better and more. suM lm e th a t education aneh. W e were tatieh^ th a t education was desirable, an'1 wan a nece«.«ltv In order to e n a b ^ ns to' k n o w better h o w to 1)ve in the bn-‘Uneis w orld, and to m ake auecew alone the lines o f hus!ne.s«. and to do better, and more e£Bcten* w ork, b n t th a t n w ta l in te e iitv and eodllness stood far above learnlne iT hls X have never foreotten. *- lo ne w ith thoiisanda of others w ho are o f th e old schools W e d o n ’t to foreet It. T he fant Is It became a part of us and we have cherish' ed It across th e years. Boys and i(irls, m en and wom en w ent on t from the old school to live clean fiws-~yes. eodfv litres, re deeplv ImDresaed th at the N U M B E R r 7 BOTTOMS VP OUT-OF-COURT!- Bibte waa the'Book of alt'books;, that God Is its Author, and thn» God rules fn the affairs of men. We were taueht to be manly and womanly; to be honest and truthfnl: to be law abtdlne and God-lovlo?. and to reverence and respect onr conntrv's laws, our flse and our wonderful Government. Thia made thnusand4 efeat and noble, manv of whom have left tbeir mark upon the **sand of time** to live atter them to-, bleaa the world, Owr bpotes didn't qitestlon the existence of God, nor the Holy Bible as be. Ine Inspired of God. They held this ereaf truth before onr eyes and minds and we sincerelv believed It all, and believe it today. Such hfls held us In check that we have not departed from God and the Cbrl«- tlan relleion, but have stood for all that.'Is clean In llte. In church an'* jin Government. This we do not regret, but ere thankful for. Thinking he was crossing a field. •Josh Jones meandered aerbss the cnunlry club golf grounda Just a member was teeing off In the distnrico. The drive sent the ball rJfjhl agafnst hts eye. Looking around to sec who had done It, he 'tt\ed the golfer ctfmlng towards Hhui ’• ‘•You can’t get aw ay.^lth that," .veiled Josh. ‘T m gq^ng' to sue you in court—r m going to sue you for five hundred doUars.’*' . “ I said ‘fo re /" 'shouted the iolfer. V ^ •T il take It,- answered Josh. BBQ^, p a r d o n . One cold wet night a Dublin Jarvey had to take a long journey. “Walt a minute. T im ," said tbe friendly passenger, when he had paid his fare, “and TU send you out a drink.*' In a short time a m aid appeared with a tumbler et whisky and water. The Jarvey took a sip, then he looked at the maid suspiciously. "Tell me now,*' he aafd, 'V hich did you put In first, the w hlsl^ or the water?”'*The whisky, ot coursa,* said the maid Indignantly. “Ah well, maybe TU coma to H • yet. at the bottom of the gUia.** replied the jarvey. « The distinguished reception com­ mittee of H arvard University scarcfted In vafti for Sir Walter Kaleigh. descendant of the famous personage In English and Ameri- can nistory, due for a course of eciures at Harvard. ... Missing him at thc >traln, the delegation seiirched the waiting rooms. They espied an linpressive. looking stranger, and ilia chairman accosted him. “ Pardon me. are you Sir Walter Rateigh?" he asited.: ••Thunder, nol”. he answered with emphasis. “I'm Christopher Co­lumbus. Sir Walter Is in. the next room playing cards with Queen Ellxabelht” Shirt Tail Torn Customer: I sec the sign that you retail shirts here. Is that right? Lady Clerk: Yes sir. Customer: Then will you please *um your back while I take minenff? Lynn Says: iwti'csh dried vegetables u n til plump, in W ater to cover, before. cooUing. Peas and beans inust be soaked for several hours. Some del^drated vegetables can be . re­ freshed in th irty mfaiutes to. one hour and some, like greens, re* quire no soaking. Leave oven door ajar after food has been removed and beet turned off. This permits oven to cool Without condensation of molE> ture on various parts. Cool oven thoroughly before washing to prevent eracing et porcelain /Inlsb. , Reindeer Men Neat ..le town of Les Eyzees in southern Prance is a :fa m o ^ cave whero there Is evidence that hu* m an lv><ngs lived- and died 2S.OOO years n-rn Thesi* cave dwellers, were I'lv wn as ‘‘Reindeer M en/’ On *ho wnlls of the caves there stUI remain painting* of prehistoric |n bright colors that look as If the'v. had lust been painted, ■These oal tlng* lnd'.‘'ate' that the Reindeer Men posiessPd a high de' gree of Hi'ilstic skill an^ knew how to rrnlte exceUert nn'm i»y grnd- ing Ihe p<5'npn* wlih oil. To make (he r uaml. they us»‘d days from th( earth red brown, yellow and black--aid mixed them with anl- m al (r>** oils In vessels made from r wer . 'lmbs of the , ■•In- deer. A Republican candidate, in a house-to-house canvass, was trying to persuade a voter to ballot tor that ucki^t.^ “No," said the voter, •*my father was a Democrat, and so was my grandfather. and.I won't vote any­ thing but the Democratic ticket.** •That’s no argument.** said the candldate,r'‘suppose 'your fatfier and?ydiir;-gi^ndmother had been horse; .thieves; .would that make you a:|ioi^e thief?** **No,r^eame the answer. " I stip- pose in that case-Fd be a Repub­lican.’! ; - I ; .lle^ll Make Out A , ^ n g plflcer at the front wrote-rhom^ to. his father:.. “Deaf Fatherr Kiiidly.send me $50 at-once; I lost another l^g In a stiff en'gagemimt and am- In the hosplfat wlthgtft. means.'*The answer was: ‘ "My-Dear Son: As this Is the lourlh iee jrou have lost (accord­ing to your letters), you'ought to - be accustomed to it by this time. Try and wobble along on any other you may have left.’* lliefr AmblUon “Just think, children,’' Said tha inisslonary. 'tin Africa there arer ’ sbc minion square mOea where little boys and girls have no Sun- day; School. Now, what should wa all,strive,to.saye money fbr?” •To go to A frlea!" cried a chorus of cheery voieaa. ly im Says: ; Close oven doors Ksmly so is>vire is no chancc of brc»kjng hin»cs. •Avoid plncing heavy rcaKinc pans or baking utensils on i)h' open door. Adjust oven r.ncks at proper heights before tumln;; on the, cur» rent. Avoid long preheating- bC' fore placing foods in the oven. It's sm art lo keep the o<^en ' clean to . i7Ct the maximum radi* ation of heat On electric ranges place sauce­pans on surface units before tum-i ing on the switch. Turn olT the heal on all units a few minutes before food Is done, thus utlljztaig . stored heat. In Mnss. .itlet-.deep■midv. c"~: dl'cnvored v 'h y s mo- I'p-iee pla'M did ■fet C'.rr'<-vnd with Ihc , „ hl5 r«n<«>rslton .he ol»'e< h»d been screwed on upn'-dc d'’wo Shell Do !• «'*alile. an advertisement in the Times offered a “good oppor­ tunity for an Inefncient stenog* '•npher lo work until wc can secure an efficient one." * Vi!-! of Eyo»lasses Rulnetl Cy Un9.'tl)odox Wearing A good way to make un opthal* .):iv specialist shudder Is to pull your eyeglasses woy down toward the tip cf your nose when you read, fo to sure, the glasses magnify tn that position, but a large ;ari oi their value is ruined. For glasses do much more than just magnify. When properly placed before your eyes, Uiey cor­ rect errors of vision. They focus Ihe print so that the letters are sharp; they eliminate blur; they avoid double vision; and they pre­vent the distortion of the print due to astigmatism. All this is sacri­ficed when the glasscF are nof cor­rectly placed. The lens of the eyeglass and the natural lens of your eye should form a single cpUcal system, oper­ating as one. But they can do that only If the glasses arc kept In ex* acdy the right position. It is the j*b of ophthalmic specialists to see that your glass lenses arc pre­ cisely suited to your individual needs and that they arc so placed as to combine properly with your eyes. Once your Individual require . ments have been established by a thorough examination, the delicate operations of grinding, gaugiiu and . polishing the lenses must be per­ formed. Then the specialist meas­ ures the. distance between your pup’ls so that when your lenses are placed in their frames or mount­ ings the optical axis of each lens may be exactly matched with the pupil of each eye. Furthennore. he makes sure (hat each lens is at the correct distance in front of each eye and that it if set at the right angle.And even that Isn’t all.. The frames, the nosepiece. and the ear­ pieces must be adjusted so that the glasses will be completely comfort­ able and you will not be tempted •n move them out of place. Harbor Improvemenf Planned tor Tangier < The free-wheeling, free-trading ihtematlonal city of Tangier on North Africa’s Atlantic coast plans to spend $4,500,000 on improverrient of Its crowded and Inadequate har­bor. A postwar booi.i In population and construction makes better port factJlities essential. Steel. lumber and cement for Tangier’s building program must be Imported. Pres­ ent port facilities are largely tak­ en up with already existing ship­ ping—regular oceangoing freight and passenger service connecting with such points as Marseille, Bor­ deaux, Casablanca and ports In Spain. Hence, many cargoes must be lightered to shore until d'’*'k. facilities arc expanded. ' . Our County And Social Security B v W .K . W hite. Manager. A t the present time, nine out of ten persons in the United States who work for a livins are earning retirement protec tio n . Three out of every four jobs are covercd by rhe old-age and survi­ vors insurance provisions of the Social Security Act. The importance of the old*aee and survivors insurance program to the nation is easily recognised. During its 16 vears of operation, it has bccome the nation's basic family itvsurance prosram and has played a major role in maintain­ ing the home and in upholding family stabiUty and contitiiuicy. The primary purpose of the pro* ' gram Is to provide a foundation o f family protection and to mini* mize the serious financial results of(old«age and premature death. w The 8WOUS iinandal problems which! confront families when their income is reduced ot elimi' nated as a result of old age death of the bread-winner are concern of all communities. So* cial security benefits have made It possible In many instances for bc>i neficiarics to remain economically independent. These benefits have enabled many beneficiaries to be self-supporting in their own homesj and others to pay their share of expenses in a jolnthousshold with relatives or friends. The benefits received from diis fam ily insur* ance program are making it pos-| sible to keep families together and at the same time, are slowing down che rate ac which savings dnd other assets must be used up. The drain on both public and private welfare funds has been curtailed. Bcnefic payments help to build family security, and conmtunity whose families are! .free from economic insecurity is a strong community. W ith approx- imately 4,725,000 persons now re­ ceiving about $190300,000 in old- age and survivors Insurance bene­ fit payments each month, each community is strengdtened bythe stabalizing effects of social secur­ ity dollars coming into local busi- ’ ness and industry. <A representative of this office w ill be in M ocksviiie again on Nov. 26th, at the court house,, second floor, at 12:30 p. m.> and on the same date in Cooleemee, at die old Band H all, over L.ed- ford’s Store, at 11 a. m. A fe w land potters left- KERENS GOOD NEWS YO U CA N B U Y A New Singer Sewing M a c h in e As Low A . $92.50. Liberal Allowance For Your Old Machine. Easy Budeet Terms. Spcciar terms to tobacco and cotton farmers. Buy now and pay one*thind. Pay one-third on your 1953 crop, and one-third on yotir 1954 crop. Ask to see . the new Singer Vacuum Clean-' er with the magic handle. W rite or phone for free demonstra­ tion in your home. It Pays To Buy The Best.Come Bv, Call O r W rite Singer Sewing Machine CO M PAN Y n S. M ain St. Lexington, N O . ____ Phone 223S — Seen Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. . OQOOOO Milkman and Hish School girl with love-lleht shining in their eves, hanfiinc around parking me­ ter on street cornet—M rs. Clyde Hendricks getting ready to begin her Christmas shopping—Gradv and Albert Sain holding talkfest in front of hardware store—M rs. Paul Richards shopping in dime store—M rs. P. G . B . ow .i and Ben Boyles loading big box into auto trunk—M ts. Russell Barber and small daughter doing some after, noon shopping around the square —Ladv wanting to know who would be the new postmaster in Mocksviiie after Ike took over— Pious old lady remarking that what this town needed was more prayermeetings and fewer dances M rs. Ernest Lagle doing some' easly Christm as shoppine around tw n —Gradv Ijames and fam ily sitting in park.d auto wjitching m ffic roll b y-C h al M iller feed- ing cash into parking meter— Miss Flossie Foster standing in dime store watching sm all part of the world go by—Miss Jane Mc­ Guire carrying arm load o f mail across the square-Three legal lights and one physician assemb- lobby-Vernon M iller hurryinif down M ain street; but pausing for a moment to com­ ment on recent election—Miss Carolyn Ferabee writing letter in postoffice lobby—M rs. Ted funk- ervraitlngfor husband to carry her to dinner long after the town clock had struck one—M rs. O . R . Allen looking at beautiful dolls In Western Auto Store-M rs. Ne-' ra G^bey carrying new apron and home-made doll up Main street—Carmen Greene wanting to know if the Street Rambler was out last week—M rs. Cecil U ttle carrying large bag o f grocer­ ies up Main street—Lena >-omat- le r wishing it would s n o w —Rob­ ert Basinger talking about making trip to Missouri—M rs. W illiam McClamrock doing a little early morning sweeping on M ain street —Cecil M orris carrying bunch of trespass notices around the square —Soldier’s vjife sitting in dime store writing' her husband, who is in Germany, a few lines to cheer him up—Miss Nancy Glasscock mailing letter Patrolman and po- liceman talking things over in front of postoffice—D r. W illiam Long carrying load o f m all to his car—Stranger trying to find build­ ing and loan office—M rs. Leslie Daniel unpacking carton of nvlon hose—Miss O ejn Luwery carry­ ing big bag of groceries down M ain street—Snow Beck lamb- ling around town on sunny Sat­ urday aftemoon—MIss Faye Nay­ lor mailing batch of letters—Miss Eunice Daniel 4olng some win­ dow shopping-Floyd A llen leav­ ing for Iowa, where the tall corn grows—lackVogler on his way down Main street—Mi& Gertrude Sherrill getting ready to catch a bus for home—J . E . M cDanisI and W ill Markland parting after ex­ changing a few words in front of local cafe-Joe M urphy, of N . C .. . State College, spending the week lend at home catching up w ith sleep and home-cooked rations. Shoaf Coal & Sand Co. W e Can Supply Yo u r Needs IN GO O D C O A L, SAN D and B R IC K C all or Phone U s A t Any Tim e PH O N E194 ' Formerly Davie Brick & CoaI Co PAGE TWO THE DAViB RliX^ilb. MOCkSVILLE, ii. C . NOVEHBFS 26. tS62 THE DAVIE RECORD, n-. fl. 0. L. Willkms Great Jehosephat C . FR A N K STR O U D , E D IT O R .' W illiam H . Howard. 71, well- O liver Lafavette W llliam a, 87,| W ho ever heard of puttinB on __——-----------------------known Davie County merchant, died at his home in Sumter, S . C 'trad e days d iiTln i the holidays? TELEPHONE 1 died Nov. 16, at the home of his early Tliursday morning. He had'Ads must he scarce. Trade days daughter, M rs. C . W . Shepherd, been in bad health for some tim e,' are generally put on to help stim- at Cooleemee. M r. W illiam s was a native of.ulate business during the dull Mr. Howard was an assistant Davie CountVi a son of M r. and seasons, overseer with the Erw in Cotton M rs. O . L . V/itUams, of Fork. I M ills of Cooleemee, for 30 years He was engaged in manufaccur* ^ unit! his retirement several vears ing tobacco at Farmington for sev* sijfMlWrMS^N N ’ S '® * ” - He has operated a groceiy eral years, and moved to Mocks- • <2.«l| store near Ephesus for some time, ville more than 50 years ago. He B&tered atthePostoffiee in Mocks- ville, N. Cm as Second'clftRB Mail matter. March 8.1003. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: SIX MONTHS. OUTSIDE STATK • $1(1 "IF MY PEOPIE. WHICH ARE CAUED BY MY NAME. SHAU HUMBIE THEMSRVES. AND PRAY, AND SEEK MY FACE. AND TURN AWAY FROM THEIR WICKED WAYS; THEN WIU I HEAR FROM HEAVEN. AND Will FORGIVE THEIR SINS. AND Will HEAl THEIR UND."- I CHRON. 7 :0_____________ From his looks the Chnmeleon hasn't fully recovered from the severe shock'he underwent on Nov. 4th. He may get over it, but may never look like himselfagnin. W c didn't get to Washington last week to sec Genernl Ike travel up Pennsylvania Avenuej but it seccns that a half m illio.i or more folks were in WashinKton for this occasion. His wife died 10 years aRo. and C . C . Sanford operated a to* Surviving are one daugh*'er, M rs. bacco factory on Salisbury street C . W . ShephcVd» of Cooleemee for several years. M r. W illiam s five sons, B ill, Ed and Sam How- and the late Z. N . Anderson were ard, all of M ocksviile; Roy and In tlie mercantiie business where C . W . Howard, ot Cooleemee; six the postoffice now stands, nearly grandchildren; tw .j sisters, Mrs 50 years ago. M r. W illiam s was Charles Robbins, of YadkinvlHe, si perintendent of the M ocksviile and M rs. Thomas Howard, of Furniture Co. for several vears. M ocksviile, Route 3; one brother, He later built a venec.ins plant in Theo Howard, M ocksviile, R . 4. North Mt.>cksvillc, which he ope^ Funeral services were held ut ated for many years. About 32 3^0 p. m. Tuesday at Cooleemee years ago he moved his fam ily to Methodist Chuich with Rev. H ; Sumter. S. C ., where he operated C . Austin ofiiciating, and the body a large veneering plant. He later laid to rest in Liberty Methodist established a number of veneering Church cemetery. plants and furniture factories in ---------------- South Carolina.23 Inducted M r. William^ was a member of th e M o cksv iile M as o n ic Lodge, Oavie Cmmty sent 23 men w ChAclotte a n d w as presented a 50«vcar m em - It is only four weeks until FHdav for lutluciloa Into .h . .rn.«l rorc... bership pin bv his lodae here in Christm as. Do vour Christmas SU ,,^3 Will tfo to ChnrlHiie for physicul |exaininn S u rv iv in g are o n e so n , C . F ran k tion. The (ollowins men Ifft Fridnv: W ilh .m s, o f H ig h P o in t; tw o Joe Wilson Lnvnian. Dovid G Trlveiie. daughters, M rs L. M . G raves, of C b .rle .w F .» W illi.m H. Statesville, a n d M rs. T . H . BriceHarvey SIdden. K«rmit B, Shoof, Johnnie f « ^ ^ * E. Michael. Gary G. Hursey. Jnmes K. o f S um te r, b .. C .; a sisttr, M rs. Munday. Bobby J. Burton. William C. L u la D avis, W in »c o n .S u le m , a nd Armaworlby. Carl L. Myers. Junior R. tw o grandsons. H is w ile , th e for. Myem. Carl L. Smith. Billy D. Welker, m e r M iss M attie U a h n so n , o f Far* ,UV .U U .« .uuw . . . u . r , .. ...V J«0.e» H Frye Rob«n L Hendrix. Her d ie d a b o u t 25 years ago. th e people rule a n d n o t a few die ;mnn D, Miller. Bobby C. Hefte. Benjamin c i • i_ u tators. A d o n a io n to th e various T. Chotle. U 0. , « I • I t J u t Hendrix. Johnnie F Willlama Oolv one u ie h o m e m S u m te r tr id a v utter*orphanages m .h e state w o u ld be On,, on w ilh h is pastor. R e v . F. T . greatly apprecated. G.ve as tl.e Cunningham oificiating, and the shopping before the rush begins. Read the ads in The Record and do your Christmas shopping with the merchants who appreciaic your business e »ou«h to ask for it. Tomorrow is ThanksgivmR day. We all have much to be thankful for in this land of plenty, where Lord has prospered and blessed you, You can generally save money body laid to rest in the fam ily Th is is the season of the year ______ K »y ,qu„re.in Sumter cemetery.. _______ov domg your shoppmu u«th ' x ilEBI St lUIITOh Ja n one of the many beantlfol detlgni in 0«]id tillver br Reed * Barton, imiter cra(inMB tw over 135 yeara. 'The Gift Shop V o u r neighbor read s Th e R ecord . many blessings that are bestowed upon us In this great country, rhe home of the brave and the land of thefres. A good Davie Democrat was saying last week chat he had lost five cents a prtund nn his cotton ^ since Ike was elected. He forKot t to mention that the price of cot­ ton had bci-n declininc almost daily tor a month before tho elrc* tion. If Ike is responsible for cotton dropping he must he re­ sponsible for the price of st-Kk eoing up. It is a pr>or rule that won't work both wavs. RepuhUcans Gain The Republican parcv is still a- live in North C.irolina rea-a rdless of what our Democratic friends may say to the conrrnry. The parly gained four new Rep rescn tatives in the next legislature, and w ill have Hmembei's in the next House instead of 10, which we had two years ago. Two Repub­ lican Senators wore elected, one from rhe 24th and rhe other from the 30ih D istrict, which is the same number we had two vears ago. It could have been worse. Mrs. J. M. Plott M rs, Marv Alice Plott, 91, of Advance, Rou’e 1. died at her home Wednesday, after nn eight* year illness. She was ho-> in Davie County, and spent her entire life In the Ad^'ance community, and was - n ^ active member of the Advance Methodist Church until she be. came 111. t Surviving arc five daughters, M rs. John Blake o f Advance, Route 2, M rs. W . V , Roberson -jf A iv^nce. Rdure 1, and Miss Bes­ sie Lee Plott of the home one s m Tomes H . Plott; 23 grandchildren; and 28 grenr grandchildren. ' Funeral servi *es were conduct­ed at 3 p. m , Frid..v at Advance Methodise Church by Rev. Oscar Harkman, Rev. W . E . Fitzgerald, Rev. George Bruner and Elder J. E- M anual. Burial was in the church cemetery. G o i n g H u n t i n g T H A N K S G I V I N G ? W e H a v « A G o o d S t o c k O f Shotguns f r o m ..............................................$24 to $l 10 22 Rifles, f r o m .........................................$15.40 to $40.50 Shot Gun Shell.-,—22 Cartridges it !s Time To Lay-Away Those Christmas Gifts Before You Lay Away A G ift See Our Selection O f. . . Radio Flyer Wagons Tricycles Sunbeam Mixmasters Toasters Hunting Coats W liirllng Tractors Percolators Roasters Hunting Trousers Black & Decker Power Tools Instead o f Giving Him Tie or Handkf.' chief Give Sonniething He Can Use! S e e O u r D i f p i e y O f G i l t W r a p p t - d Hand T o o ls your hom e, town merchants. . «»’ •. M RS. C H R IS T IN E W . D A N IEL when the frost is on the pumpkin w hen vou count the cost of trans-a n d th e fod d e r in th e sh o c k .' to S u m te r to be present fo . the P u m p k in p ic, -Simmon p u d d in g ,h e parking problem s, you can “ “ a n d locust beer, alo ng w ith turkev save w orry, trouble a n d cash bv a n d m in c e pies w ill soo n be in p a ,„ n liin g h o m e m erchants, order. None of \is appreciate the , Notice to Creditors Having qualified as Adminis ra- tor of the estate of G . A . Cren­shaw, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons holding claims against said estate, to present them tojihe undersigned within twelve months from date hereof, or this notice w ill be pleaded in bar of their recovery A ll persons owing said estate w ill please make prompt settlement. This the I7th day of' November, 1952. C . R . CREN SH A W . Admr. of G . A . Crenshaw, Decs'd. M i l T o p S u p e r M a r k e t Winston-Salem Higiiway Wc wish to thank all those who have given us a share ot their patronage since we opened our new placc of busi­ ness, and hope to serve many new customers To show our appreciation, we are ofiering a few specials; B EEF FROM 40 TO 8& PO UND P 0 R :R FROM 30 TO SOc PO UND BACO N A S LO W A S 20c PO UN D FA T B A C K , 20c PO UND M O C K SV ILLE FLO U R , lOOlbs $645 SOlbs $3.35, 251bs $1.69 SU G A R , 51bs, 49c, 10 pounds, 97c FEED , 100 lbs. $4.00 R EG U LA R GAS 25c, G A LLO N H I-TEST G AS, 27c, G A LLO N W ith each purchase of $i0.worth of merchandise we are giving free, one broom, as. long as they last. Tommy & Johnny Hendrix lust North O t Mocksviile, o.i Winston-Salem Highway Wanted To Buy Your Lespedeza Seed. We Will Pay High­ est Market Price See U Before You Sell. M c C la m ro c k S e e d C o ., Phone 307 Depot Street You^U Get More for Your Money when you deal wilh JESSE G. BOWEN MUSIC CO. PRICES • HAMMOND ORGANS TERMS to • GRAND PIANOS to PLEASE • SPINET PIANOS buit YOU G USED PIANOS YOU Wrhc for Catalogue. . . DemonBlrallon Gladly Arranged JE S S E O. BOWE]^ ilU S lC m. 217 W EST F IF T H ST.V W IN ST ON -SALEM . N. C. ......................................... M ille r - E v a n s H a r d w a r e C o m p a n y A t Intersection of Statesville and Yadklnville Highways - Phone 65 , M ocksviile, N . C . G i v e H i m A G i f t From Our Famous Brands Long Ac'epted As Leaders For Style And Quality C^^nturv White Shirts By Van Heusen $3.95 . W on't W rinkle Ever Sport Shirts $2.95 To $7.95 ____ Botany Ties * - $1.00 to $2.50 N e w Shipment English Sport Coat? $2 4.9 5 ’ Rolfs B ill Folds $3.50 $12.50 Monogrammed Free In 22-Karat Gold L e s l i e ' s M e n ’ s S h o p O N T H E SQ U A R E M O C K SV ILLE, N . C. OAVIE R W R b . HOCKSVlLLi. N. d NOVEMBER 26. 19^PAGE THRE THE DAVIE RECOIU). Oldest Paper In The County No Liqifor, Wine, Beer Adi NEWS AROUND TOWN. George Rowland spent Thun- day in Greensboro buying ^hrist- mas merchandise. Attorneys A . T . Grant a n d Avalon H all spent. Thursday in Raleigh on business. M iss E lla Mae N ail and Richard N ail spent Wednesday in Wins- toi)-Salem shopping. M rs. R . LT w a lk e r and M rs. Saniotd Green, spent last week at Davis Hospital. Statesville, taking tieetm ent.' ■Mr. and M rs. Frank Stroud, ]r., spent the week-end at Anderson, S. C „ guests of M r. and M rs. Lew­ is Morehead. Misses. Lela Moore and Daisy J l f „ _ l i ; W\ Holthouser are .pending thlsiWrS. iT, I/. 00016 w eefcatSt.Peters^ tg ,Fla. j M rs..W . D . Booie, 54, died at Twenty two inches of snow fell [>“ 'ho”»e on M ocksviile, Route 2 ta a 24-hout period Friday a n d Tuesday morning, following a Saturday in Knoxville, Tenn. Glad we don’t live in diat city. | husband, one— son, W . D . Boole, Jr., o f the hoiiw Bryan Sell is a patient at Duke four brothers! G .'6 .' and Antom! Hospital, Durham, where he is Brown, o f Winston-Salem, Tom ! taking treatment. A ll hope for Brown, of Yadkin County, and^ him a speedy recovery. Paul Brown, of Harmony, two; a t A ^ I w C o t T Sa^ ^ n a X h i e ' to^^^to ^ f l f b » r spend the Thanksgiving holiday. M o S e with her parents, M r. and M rs. T . L . Junker^ M r. and M rs. Raymond Siler, of Thom asville, were in town last week shaking hands with their many friends. M r. and M rs. Oscar Poindexter and tw o fine young sons, of Ad­ vance, were M ocksviile visitors one day last week. Rev. and M rs. E . M . Avett, of High Point, spent one day last week in town with their daughter, Mcs. Henry Cole Tomlinson D r H . F . Baity, of Route 2, re­ turned last weeic from a business trip to Asheville and Knoxville, Tenn.. where he was a dentist for many years. M r. and M rs. Bruce Freeman, of Route 4. are the proud parents o f a fi.ie son, Charles Keith who arrived at Rowan memorial Hos­ pital on Sunday, Nov. 16th. M rs, W . F . Johnson, of States­ ville, returned home Sunday after spending two weeks in town, the guest ot her daughter, M rs. Clar­ ence Holmes and M r. Holmes. J . R . Howard, who lives in the sleepy old town of Knoxville, in the Volunteer State, is spending a few days in Rowan and Davie with relatives and friends. The- many friends of Harley Sofiey w ill be glad to learn that he is much better, after having been confined to his home for several weeks suffering with ar­ thritis. M r. and M rs. H . R . Johnson of this city, are the proud parents of two fine daughters, Sylvia Ann and Sonya Sue, who arrived at Rowan Memorial Hospital on Fri­ day, Nov. 14th. A . A . Wagoner who returned home from from Davis Hospital, Statesville, about ten days ago, fol­ lowing a long illness, is getting a- long nicely, his triends w ilt be glad to leam . The ladies of Clarksbury Metho­ dist Church, located near Har­ mony are having a Barbecue Sup­ per at.the' church, Nov. 25, bt- ginnlng at 5 o'clock. Trays w ill be served for 50c and $1.00. M r. and M rs. c T X . M cAllister, of Route I , have purchased the Crenshaw house on South Main street and moved into their new home Tuesday. The Record is glad to welcome these good peo­ ple ,to our town. ' O ut old friend E . P . Ratl^ge progressive farmer of Woodleaf, w u in town Wednesday on busi­ ness;- Pink tells us that he made 32 Bales of cotton this fa ll—that it i« Ml picked and sold. He got40i and'.41 cenu a pound tor most of his crop. Uavie County officers elected on Nov. 4th, w ill be swoin in at the court house next Monday, Dec. Ist. ;'A ll of the oflScers were re- d ect^ and are: Chas. R . Vogler, Register of Deeds, R . P . M artin, J. M . Groce and Clarence R . Carter, County Commissioners, and Sam Talbert, County Surveyor. Funeral service's were held at Union Chapel Methodist Church Horn, at Rowan Memorial Hospi­ tal on Saturday, N o v . ISth. Grandfather J . M . Horn is one of ths hapolest gtand-daddies i n Davie County^ D r. and M rs. Clyde W . Young <” •. Th “ "d ay morning, of this city, are rejoicing over ,he • C . Anderson, arrival ot a fine daughter, Lucile ter LofFin officiating, and the body laid to rest in the church cemetery. To the bereaved farm ily The Reco.d extends sympathy in this hour of bereavement. James E. Jacobs Funeral services for James E . Jacobs, 17, who died at the' home of his parents, M r. and M rs. Char­ lie lacobs,' at Cooleemee, on Nov. ,16, were held at Cooleemee Pres­ byterian Church at 3:30 p. m, last Tuesday, with Rev. M r. Pollick and Rev. H . W . Parker officiating. The body was laid to.rest in Lib­ erty Methodist Church cemetery. Surviving are the parents, three brothers, Carl and Elm er Jacobs, of Cooleemee, and David Jacobs, ot Charlotte; one sister,. Patricia Jacobs, of the home; three half- sister;, Margaret Jacobs, of the home, M rs. John Daniel, Mocks- ville, and M rs. Elizabeth Murphy, of Durham;'and one half-brother, Harry Jacobs, of Cooleemee. D r.H . C . Sprinkle, who had the misfortune to fall and bre k his his right wrist while getting ready to leave for Durham in the early morning of Nov. 14th, to visit his son, was taken to Duke Hospital, where he was given medical at­ tention. H is fnends hope he w ill soon be able able to return home. Harvest Festival A Harvest Festival sponsored by Salem Methodist Chuich, w ill be held at Davie Academy on Satur­ day, Nov. 29rh, beginning at 6 o'clock. There w ill be many gam­ es, all kinds of eats and drinks. A Queen from the community w ill be crowned. The Queen w ill select a King, w ho'w ill also be crowned during the evening. Everybody invited to come out and enjoy this big event. Plenty of chick .n pie .like mother once baked. Smith-Lutz Ronald B. Sm ith, H . M . 3, of the U . S. Navy, son of M rs. h^ry Sm ith, of this dty and Miss Vir^ ginia Lutz, daughter of M r. and M rs. Truman Lutz, of Dallas, N . C ., were united in marriage at the Dallas Methodist Church at high noon, on Sunday, Nov. 16th with Rev* M r. Honeycutt officiat­ ing, using the double ring cere­ mony. Those attending the wed- din;< from M ocksviile were M rs. Mary Sm ith, M rs. Eugene Smith and Miss Ella Mae N ail. L H . Sm ith, of Charleston, S. C ., fiither of the groom, was also present. M r. Smith is stationed, at Nor­ fo lk, V a., and is scheduled to get his honorable discharge from the Navy next M arch, after which they w ill make their home in this city; ________________ Mrs. Cornatzer M rs. Mattie Comatzer, 66, wife of Ross C . Comatzer, of Mocks-, ville, Route 3, died last Tuesday morning at her home, following a two weeks illness. Mi^. Comat­ zer was a daughter of M r. and M rs. John Bamey. . Surviving arc the husband, two daughters. Miss Carrie Comatzer and Mrs* Odell Shore, of the hoipe; two brothers, Sam Bamey, of M ocksviile, Route 4, and Frank Barney, of Lexington, Route 3; a sister, M rs. Bobby Deal, of Tay­ lorsville. Funeral service were conduct­ed at 3:30 p. m . Thursday At Cor­natzer Methodist Chur<^ of which she was a member, with Rev. W C . Anderson officiating, and the body laid to rest in the church cemetery. WANT ADS PAY. FO R S A L E — Barbe W ire &. Galvanized Roofing. Milier-Evans Hardware Co. D A V I E D R Y G O O D S C O . O n The Square Between Postoffice A nd Bank Big Clesirance SALE Ladies $50.00 Suits Reduced to $24.98 Big Reduction In Ladies Coats From $72.98 $34 98 $ 1 .0 0 Rack Dresses Special Rack Coats. Suits, Dresses, Jackets Values to $29.98 Now $4.98 One Table Ladies Shoes Values To $5.98 Now $1.49 Ladies Pants 3Prs. $1.00 SHOES Children’s “SUNDIAL” Oxfords and Loafers $5.98 Now $?.98 Big Lot Men’s and Boy’s Work Shoes $4.98 Flannel Skirts Special A t $2.49Flap Pocket Overall Pants Regular $2.98 Now $1.98 Men’s Sweaters $2.98 FO R SA LE—Home-made mo- See Harmon McMahan, M ocksviile. Route 2.. f ‘ FO R R EN T—^Two real’ nicely rooms; one room free of charue.f| See M rs. I. D . Frost, M ocksviile,’ ! Route 2, FO R SA LE—I pqir good rabbit dogs, guaranteed. 1 Redbone op- posum dog. See Jack Feimster, ] i _________Harmony, N . C ., R . 2 .J FO R R EN T—Six room house on Church street with lights and water and hot water heater. See R . B. SAN FO RD THE BIB- i STDRE Anyone wishing to work as a^*' nurse's aid. between ages of 18-45, white, apply at M ocksviile Nursing Home for Interview. FO R SA LE—30-acre farm, with 4*room house. Cood water and bam. A ll land in cultivation. 2 miles north of M ocksviile, on M ud. M ill road. T . P . Dwiggins, _______________M ocksviile, N . C . . W A N TED — Experienced ma­ chine operators. W ill train good reliable girls. Also like to have one good young mdn to train as cutter and pattern m arker.. AddIv M O N LEIG H G A RM EN T CO . M ocksviile, N . C. D o Y o u R ead T h e R ecord ?' THe Firestone store We Have A Store Full Of Christmas Goods Bicycles Children’s Autos Electric and Mechanical Trains Erector Sets Dolls, Doll Cradles Footballs Basketballs Aoffce to Creditors Having qualified as Executors of the es tate ot Robert A . Foster, de- Princess Theatre TH U R S D A Y & FR ID A Y CaryG'^nt &. M urilyfi Monroe In *‘M O N KEY BU SIN ESS” W ith Ginger Rogers & Charles Cobu rn. News. . , notice is hereby' given to all persons holding claims against I the estate o f said deceased to pre­sent the same, properly verifiM , before the undersigned at Route 1, M ocksviile, N . C ., on or before the 18th day of November, 1953, or this notice w ill be plead in bar of tecovety. A ll persons icwlebted to said estate w ill please call up­on the undersigned and make prompt settlement. Th is 18th day' of Novembeir, 1952.M A RY E . FO STER,- a C L A Y FO S TER . . Ezrs. o f Robert A , Foster, Decs*d. j .By A . T . Grant, Attorney. ' • SA TU R D A Y Susan Hayward In “T U LS A ” W ith R oberc Pfesron. In Technicolor Serial & Cartoon M O N D AY & TU ESD A Y Clifton Webb S i Anne Francis In "D R EA M B O A T” W ith ' Jeffrey Hunter *. News & Cartoon- / W ED N ESD A Y ' Ralph Meelcer & - Leslie Caron In "G LO R Y A LLEY *' W ith Louis Armstrong Comedy and Cartoon DAVIE <;OUNTY*S BIGGEST SHOW VALUE ADM. 12c and 36c Complete Line Christmas Tree Lights And Decorations F o r D a d a n d M o m Radios, Electric Razors, Electric Toasters, Irons, Etc. H UNDREDS O F GIFTS FO R ALL T H E F A M ILY F i r e s t o n e H o m e i& A u t o S u p p l y G. H. C SHUTT, Owner Phone 132 Mocksviile; N. C. /■{ PAGE EOUR THE DAVil!! HECi)RU. MOCKSViLijg: N, C. SOVSMBER 26 By;tiR.tKENNETH, |.,TPREMAN K S ' ' f f l » i , ’’‘.V£i"ni'N"a, E ,« .. •Un« IVsn>2ll. What Makes Righf? Lcflson for November 30,1D52 Dr. Foreman I*YNN CHAMBERS* MENU *Tftm«lc PI* Lime 0«UUoe~ CoHacc Cheete MoM Croaty Hmrd Rolls Hoi Bftkea Fesn Bev«rAK« •Bcolpe Given WHAT makes righl, right? It cannot be determined by counting votes. The vokc of the people is not necGSsarily the voice of God.Even If everybody In the world did exactly whal is right (which hos never happened in this world yet) tl still weuid not be ri«ht merely bvciiU5c tbc.v nil did it. If “right*’ meant nothlntJ more than what everybody docs or what most peo­ple do. then right would change as often as popular opinion changed.It would changG with the climate, with the calendar. But right is somclhini! more enduring than popular opinions, customs or en> thuslnsms. ^ ^ Docs '‘Right” m a n “Legal”?Another notion of what It Is that makes rlRhl. Is Law. If it's legal it’s right, if it’s illceal It’s wrong.But haven't wc often heard tho expression,“There ought lo be a law . . ."1 The person who snya that means that there Is somothing which is right that isn’t legal; he wants a law to match what is right Or again, laws are sometimes re­pealed. But no one would ever vote to repeal a law If he didn't think the law was wrong. Good men sometimos repeal laws; but no good man ever wanted tu repeal ••right.”There is a variety of this idea which has more truth in It: namely, that right is the same thing as the law of God. But God does not make acts right or wrong simply by ordering them to bo so.Could God have said. Thou shalt kill, thou shalt bear false witness? Could he have said. Thou shalt hate Ih)' God and hate thy neighbor? Of course not. He could not have made up such nonsense-laws, such wicked commandments, because he Is not that Icind of God, for one thing, and for another thing because if he did, it would have meant the destruc­tion of the human race. Although right, and the will of God, arc really tho same thing, yet an act is not right because God wills or com­mands It because it is right.• • • How Jesus Looked at It How did Jesus our Lord stand on Ihis question? What made a thing right, for him? He got Into trouble with the lawyers of his time, and he got into trouble with what we would call D.D.’fi and prominent preachers and professors of the­ology (the Pharisees): they called him "bad” and had him executed accordingly.So there was evidontlj- a differ- ence between his way of looking at •■right” and their way. It was pre­cisely on this point that they split. Jesus tried to make clear, though the Pharisees were too blind to see It, that the Sabbath law. any law of God or good rule of man, is right and good only In so far as it pro­motes the welfare of man. This is not setting up man above God. for God is man's Creator. Right is what develops God's children: wrong is what stunts, deforms, defeats and destroys them.To put it in another way: The test . of right and wrong is always this: Will this thing make people better and make better people? If so. it Is right. All our laws, institutions and interests must bo brought to the test of their effect on human wel­fare. And of course, in Jesus' view, the welfare of man includes social, spiritual and menial well-being and growth, not physical health and financial wealth alone. Littuor and Welfare This being Temperance Sunday,It is a good time to think about the liquor trafnc in the light of all this. *ntink it out for yourself. Remem­ber. alcohol is a habit-forming drug, and aU talk about liquor cannot erase that very plain fact.Now think about the whole busi­ness of making It, glamorizing it In . advertising, selling it and using it. Look around you in your home community, and In our nation at• large, and ask: Does it bring more benefit to people In your commu-. nity than it brings harm? Is the ^ purpose of the business human ■ 'welfare?• “ Ask the welfare agencies in yourcommunity—the Red Cross, the hospital, the agencies that look• after the poor, the orphanage, and; so on»ask these people: Does the liquor business, make your work easier? Is the liquor trade the aUy ot the public school and the church? Doeff it make better citizens, better Christians? If it does, and only U it dees, then as a Christian can you call it right. skillet. Add tomato soup, water, seasoning, corn and green pepper; simmer for 19 minutes. For top­ping. sift togeUter dry Ingredients.Add beaten egg and milk, stirring lightly until combined. Fold in melted shortening. Place meat mlxtore In greased baking dish (2- quaft size); cover with topping.Bake in hot (425T.) oven 20 to 25 minutes until com bread is • browned.• • • Ginger Beef Pie (Serves 8)3 pounds economy cut beef 2 tablespoons suet 1 cup consnmme 6 small onions, washed skin­ned. chnpppd4 smnl} carro(«, tliccd J4 pound sliecd mushrooms orbutton inushroomft 1 IcBspoon liJack pepper W teaspoon dried tarrngon a teaspoon sineerK teaspoon {rround cinnamon 9i cup (oma<» Juice Pastry f*»r l-cnist pie Butter or substitute Wipe meat withclean. damp cloth: cube. Saute in suet until light .wn. then cook o w 1 y with iconsomme for 1 ir. Add onions, 'carrots, mush irooms, season­ings; cook slowly additional H hour. Pour into baking dish. Add tomato juice} top with pastry; crimp rim; slash top decoratively to let the steam out. Brush top with butter or substi­tute. Bake in hot <42S«F.) oven 20 to 30 minutes. JleeMcnts Kill More Youns Than Any Single Disease .Accidents are a greater threat to the lives of young children than any single disease. Dr. George M. Wheatley. New York pediatrician, said in an article in Today's Health.“Accidents kill about 5,000 chil­dren between the ages of one and four every year,*' Dr. Wheatley reported. “The natural drive In children to explore the bright new world, to put objects in their mouth and to climb and run about all combine witii immaturity, of body and mind and inadequate parental teaching and supervision to con­tribute to this appaUlng loss of , yotmg lives.“Fuller understanding of child behavion greater use of minor in­juries •s'^arning experiences, and keener awareness of the accidents likely to occur are guides to par­ents in 'immunizing* the preschool child against serious injury or un­timely death.**He cited the experience qt an Insurance company. Between 1930 and 1947. the death rate of insured children under five from all dis­eases combined declined 70 per cent The accident death rate dropped only 23 ver cent •■The chief weapon against the common childhood diseases has been immuniwitlon,’* Dr. Wheatley said. “Against accidents, the main weapon is education—particularly of parente."Motor vehicle mishaps, he said, are the most common cause of fatal Injuries, with burns a close second. Drowning, falls and poison­ing are other major causes, with almost half of these accidents oc- curring in or around the home. Painting Isn’t as Easy As II Uoics to Beginner Painting is somelhing almost anyone can do—about flO per cent ot all householders have taken tc pushing their own paint brushes.But as any person who has botched up a home paint job can * testify, painting isn’t as easy as it J looks.’ There are rules to follow and I pit/alls to avoid.' A common mistake is to paint when the weather is too hot or too damp. Authorities advise that Pall . is the best time of the year for painting. They say the weather then U roost likely to be cool and dry. ^ <Since using the right tools makes any job easier, the amateur paint­er would do weU to give careful thought' to the selection ojt fiU painting equipment Paint is of first importance. It pays to buy good quality paint that Is made especially for the type of surface on which it is to be appl'/td.. Other painting equipment noj v Tailor-Made Drugs ■one of the goals of medical science h.is beon^tbe developrnent of tailor-made drugs — specific drugs against specific diseases. A.n important step in this direction Is thfe recent discovery of the com- ‘nlex chemical structure of terrm- mycin, the antibiotic elfecUve against more than 80 human dis­eases. .Kiiowlng the molecular architecture of the drug the scien­tists may be able to identify the mechanism that actually knocks out disease. This specific arrange­ment of atoms can then be changed slightly in the hone of producing a tailor,-made drug with new medi­cinal possibilities. 1 eup siloed praaea H eup sliced flga % cup siloed datca H teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon elnnamMi teaspoon nufaner K tenspoon cloves M teaspoon allaplea M eup nut meals ii cup grape Jotee (ataai)Put prepared fruit thrvugh meat grinder. Add salt, spices and nuts and blend in grape Juice to moisten. Form Into sm'all cmes and roll In granulated sugar. Serve garnished with eandied cherries and with flavored whipped cream. ,.Pudding Saaee*1 eup'sagar2 tablespoons eorastarck 1 cup belUng water■ . Pineb ground m»eeDash nutmeg 2 tablespoons butter1 tablespoon wine vingear ■ Mix sugar and cornstarch. Gradually stir In the boiling water. Cook over low heat, stirr­ing gently, until sauce becomes clear and glossy which Indicates that cornstarch Is perfectly cooked, add spice and simmer 1 minute. Add butter and wine vine* gar. A delicious sauce for alt kinds of hot puddings.Hard Sauce M cup butter or substitute % teaspoon nutmeg or ground mace1 cup confectioner's sugar 2 tablespoons orange or lem« on Juice Beat butter or substitute until soft. Mix sugar and spice and add a small amount at a time, beat­ing as you add. Add orange juice as needed to make sauce easy to beat Serve over puddings. Lynn S<yii n > M p n u In s v io Jn t w a r Ih il will «IIow liealtd air to elr- culato treel7 about thtin. N tvir arranfa lam lo .that ,lha7 touch aach Bthar. 'thc ild . Walla or tho back ot tho oTon. Canned voitlablia ihonld bo' oookod In their own Julecl. Brlnf quickly to holllni point, then do- crooK hoai Il'reaulrci about 10 mhiutM to reheat lood. A wide ipatuly le an exMlIent utenell tor turning food, ai a fork which plorcee the (cod lenda to releaie valuable julcei. FOI^ THE FINEST COAL FO R G R A TES, STO V ES, FU R N A C E A N D STO K ER S It W ill Pav You To Call O r Phone U s. Let Us Furnish Your Fuel Oil W c Make Prompt Delivery Mocksville Ice & Fuel Co. Pohne 116 MockHvUle, N . C . LYNN CHAMBBB8* MENU Beef Pel Beasi Steamed Oaleaa Petalees and CarrMs Coeumber aad Walereresa Salad Bye Bread Boiler •Easy n«m Paddlag •Padding Saaee Beverage •Bcelpe Given Cleaning ‘ivw How can 1 remove the yellow stain from my bathtub? Probably such a stain Is due to iron In the water. Iron stains can often be removed by allowing a solution of oxalic acid to stand In the tub for a time, then flushing well with water. Oxalic acid, which can be obtained at a local drug store, is poisonous and should be used with great caution. Your sons or daughters who are away al college would like to read The Davie, Record. Only $1 for the school term LTNN 0HAMBEB8* MENU Belled Tongve CeiUge Fried Fetatbes Silvered Carreta Bread Butter*PlneappIe«Pear Salad Platter Mincemeat Cookies Beverage •Beoipe Glrea Rosy Rice Ring Good With EggsRosy Rice Ring (Serves G4)IM cups rice 2H cups tomato juice 2 teaspoons salt H cop ripe olives 114 cups grated sharp Amer> lean cheese H cup thinly sliced celery M eup thinly sliced onion 2 tablespoons chopped green sweet pepper 54 cup chopped parsley a cup chopped pimento Wash rice, add tomato juice and, salt and heat to boiling. Cover closely and cook over very low heat 20 to 25 minutes, until liquid is absorbed and rice is tender. Cut olives from pits into large picccs. Stir olives, chcese, green vegetables and plmlento lightly into hot rice with a large fork. Pock Into oiled 8-lnch ring mold or ' a loaf pan. Bake in a moderate (3.10 P.) oven 10 to 19 minutes. Unmold onto scnring plate. Serve with crcamcd eggs, or any desired sauce. Tamale Pie (Serves 6)FillingsI pound ground beef j 1 large onion, chopped 41 can tomato soup j2 cups water ^ 1 tcaspeon salt ^. % teaspoon pcnper '] tablespoon chili powder 1 cup whole kernel com (drained) Vj cup choppcd green pepper Topping;^ cun corn meal I tablespoon flou- 1 tablespoon sugar 114 teaspoons baking powder .14 teaspoon salt \ 1 beaten egg •A cup milk1 tablespoon melted sborteidng Brown ground beef and onion in Notice fo Creditors Havinf* qualified a.« AdtninUtra' trix of the csrate of W . F. Vogier» deceased, noticc is hereby given to all persons holdtnR claims agaitist the estate of suid deceased to pre­sent the same, properly verified, b fore the undersigned at Ad­ vance, N C ., on or before the 15tb day of November, 1953, or this noticc w ill be plead in bar of re­covery* A ll persons indebted to said estate w ill please call upon the undersigned and rrake prompt settlement. Th is 15ih dav of No­ vember, 1552.M A RY Mo V O G LER , Adm rx. of W . -F. Vogler, Decs'd. M r . F a r m e r ! LET US DO Y O U R J O B P R I N T I N G We can save you ihoney. on your ENVELOPES, LETTER H EADS, STATEMENTS, POSTERS, B IU H EADS, PACKET H EA D S, Etc. Patronize your home newspaper and thereby help build up your home town and county. ________ THE D AVIE RECORD. ♦ FO R RENT ♦ SPACE IN THIS PAPER Will Arrange To Suit G O O D N E IG H B O R S ~ P « ia S T O Fir Y O U R BUSINESS S F E U S F O R Self-Propelled Corn Pickers, Drills, Used or new, or for anything you need in Farm Machinery. V/e can save you monev The rosy complexion ol ihh riee ring comes from the to­mato Juice In which the rice Is \ cooked. It may be served wlih \ ereamed eggs or meal, sparked with a garnish of ripe bUves. Hendrix & W ard W lN STO N -SALEM H IG H W A Y O p p o r! u n ity s K B o c k s C NEW MONEY FOR YOUR 0U> THIfiCS 1mm Diioorfod t a n lM . b * B a .. « to a rii w M « VAHT « • » i T h e D a v i e R e c o r d ^ Has Been Published Since 1899 5 3 Y e a r s ' I-;''Otheir» have com e and gone-ypur county new spaper .k e e p i Koing. S->nietimes it has seem ed h ard tn m ake **buckle and tongue*' m eet, but soon the lu n shines and w e m arch on. O u r fa ith fu l su b scrib ers m ost o f whom pay prom ptly, g ive us courage 'an d abiding fa ith in our fellow m an. ■ If youT- neighbor is nut takin g The . .. R ecord te ll him to su b scrib e. T h e . ;■ p rice ia only $1.50 per vea r in the State, arid $ 2 .0 0 in other alatea. W hen You Come To Town . Make Our Office Your Headquarters. W e Are Alwavs Glad To See You. .0 .......................ttiimimiiiniiiiiiuiimimM^M The Davie Recdfd D A V I E O O t T N T Y 'S O l^ D E S T N B W S P A P E R - T H E P A P E R T H E P E O P L E K E A l? ! "HERE SHALL THE PPVSS. THE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS MAINTAIN! UNAWED BY INFLUENCE AND UNBRIBED BV GAIN ” VOLUM N L I II M O C K SV ILLE. NO RTH C A R O LIN A , W EDN ESD AY DECE^IBBR 3 ' NUMBER 18 NEWS OF LONG AGO: W hat W a i H appening In Da- rie B sM re P a rlcia c M eten A nd A bb reviated S k irts . (Davie Record, Nov. 30, 19*7) Mr. and Mrs. A . M. Nall and Miss Ivle N aiI.'of Hlclcory, spent Tbtirsday in town with relatives, Mr aad Mrs. Brnest Holtbonser of Charlotte, spent TbanksKlvIne bere witb reUHveSa., Hubert Frost, of Richmond, Va. spent TbanksnivioK witb bis moth, er on Rente 2. . Harlev Sofley bas pnrehased a cottaee on Sotitb Main street from Clarence H Hendricks,, Andrew Yafes,. a student at State College, Raleigh, spent Thanks; .giving in town with home folks. June Meroney, of Lenoir« spent Thursday In town witb bis parents Mr. and Mrs. H . C. Meronev. H r. Dewey Williams and Miss Gladys W illiams, both of Cootee- mee, were-united In theboly bonds of matrimony Thursday. - M r and Mrs.- Hoyt Blackwood and children, of Mooresville, spent Thanksgiving in town ..with home folks. U r. and Mrs. Frank Sanford and babe, of Chattanooga, .Tenn./were Thanksgiving visitors with rela. tivea'ln the old home town. Miss Elizabeth Christian, a stud, ent at tR'andoipb^Macon College^ Lynchburg, V a., spent Thanksgl\'« ing bare witb her parents. Paifl Sm ith, of Asheville, was In town a short while last week. Mt. Smith is a Davie County man. but is now with a big house.fumlsbing comi>any in the Mountain City. Mr. and Mrs. W . T . Yancey and chlidren. of Oxford, spent Thankfi. glviniic in town with relatives and friends, Mr. and Mrs. George Jo ^ acd lUtie daughter, of Wlnston.Salem, were'among the? Thanksgiving vis. iton’.io our town. Hiss Bva Cali, who H teaching mitslc at Brevard, spent Thanks­ giving. In town with her parents. H K ^nd Mrs. P . j , Ronse and cblldrm , qf Kannapolis, visited rr- ' latives in and around town Thanks, giving dav- ReVo Lon R . Call, of LpulsWile, K y.t spent last week In town’ with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W illis U Call. H S. Strond and datigbter. Miss MatUe. otStatesville, were guests ot Mr. atfd Mrs. C. F . Stroud and family Thanksgiving day. Miss Kathryn Brown, a member o^the Llncoinion school faculty, spent tbe^Thanksgfving holidays In town with her parents. A recent letter from Pvt. Odell James to'bls parents at. Partnlng ton, says that he la now.on board the U . S. S.* New York, harboivd at Portsmouth, Va , waiting to sail on Dec, 3 for Panama Canal, f(>l. lowed by a cruise of tbe Western Coast. '■ M rs. Emma Orlffin* of'^ Winston. Salem, and Miss Rose Owen, of thi« city, wbo were injured In ■ t bus wreck.ten days ago, are getting iaiong nicely. Miss Owen has prac. tlcnlly rebovered, while Mr^. G rit, fin is Im^rovipg slowly, a^tV^Baptlst HospitaU In Win^onlSalem: H r. John W. Smith dIedUt his home near 'Smith Grove, Sunday morning at 5 o’clock, aged 79 The funeral and burial services'i were conducted by Rev. W. L Dawsoii . Monday morning at 11 o'clock and the body laid to rest in . the)Smith Grove cemetery. U r. Smith Is’sur vfved by his widow, three' sisters and two brothers.* Thieves were busy around our town Monday night. The stores . of J . Frank Hendrix, In South Mocksville, and J«- O. Cas^, in Norib Mocksville were- robbed of clotbtng; shoes and canoed goods. Vfealth Rev. Walter E. Isenhour. Tavlorsvllle, N. C We think of wealth In terms of land. In . terms ot cash and mansions grand; In teims of. stocks and bonds and stored;. And things by-.dozens and by scores, But there is greater, wealth than lh l8 .^‘ >: That bringa. us pMce and joy- and bllsq;. \ ' It*s wealth that cqmM fromyGod above \ When wc are 611ed with H is true lo ve ..-;;.' There's wealth within the heart and soul When sin's great burden's from us roll; When we enjoy the place of prayer Because o.ir Savior meets us there; When we delight in being kind ' And helping men salvation 6nd; When we rejoice L . God's good igrace And 6,lling well life's little piece- Theresa wealth in being satisfied, To walk with Christians, side hy side; To have a home where peace is :aweet In countryside or on some street; To be content from day to day Where God would have us work and sta y ;. Yes. wealth within when we can sing : ^ . 9 Eternal praises to our'King. There's wealth that's greater far than gems, Than kingdoms, robes and diadems, Far greater than tbe world can give When for our'God we truly l|ve; It's health of body, soul and heart, It's bealtb^of mind on God's good: part; It's wealth beyond this workl^ of. Where Heaven's glories ever reign. Ah. wealth, tnie wealth, is neyer found In things of earth, which may a^und;,^-’ Yet; tnen . for ages ■ these . have sought,: . For these have struggled, worked and foDgbt, To find at last they're just the " shade’^ ’s r ^ - it :! ^ ' ■ Of better thlga.. which God bas m^de; Therefore, O soul, look highei’ ujp P;or wealth with which to fill life's cuo!/'* Best fW Pie Ainw Life. You cannot ^e1it .-:^i$urf^arv} h^ Your spirit and Vouf miod. And neither can yon rest your soul Oa anything you find, Thnt's of the earth, apart from ' God, And bis eternal grace, Although you search quite earnestly, Regardless of tbe place. The inner life of ev'ry man Can only find sweet rest By fully trnsting In ibe Lord And leaning on H is breast;And then along llfe'a lourney ber^ Be faithful all.tfcis^way, . That beayeu may .(A-,'laat be reachM Where saints foreyi|r stay, : Shoaf CoaL^& Sand Co. \ W e Can Supply li out Needs IN GOOD C O A L, SAN D and B R IC K C all or Phone U s A t Any lim e PH O N E 194 Pprmerly Davie Brick &.Cosl Co NAVAL MANEUVER . A navT wllc, bidding her husband eoMbye as he WBS embarking tor duly In the Pacific, wni Incenscd when she saw a black'Scotty trot aboard. *‘Wby should dogs be allowed to go along when the men's wives are forbidden?" she demanded In­dignantly of an otficer. ••Madam,” he replied, “you see all the men can pet one dog and nobody gets mad.'* ■ , WISHY-WASHY Filling oul-an application lor oe- : pendents’ aid. a. soldier answered ' "no” to the questior as to wHether he had any dependents. . ! "You're married, aren't you?" an officer said. i••Yesslr,^’- the soldier replied, "but she airtft dependable.^’ ! Siipped'Her Mind . "I sbouldn^t be offering you wine, should I?" You are the head ■ of the Temperance League. Jarcn^t . . you?" remarked the hostess to her male guest ■ '»••Oh no. I am head of ihe' Antl- •^VJee League."•.,i"WelJ, J knew there wasjsome­thing I shouldn't offer you.*' ------------------1' • Long Crop.Jerk: •*! saved up my money and , bought a farm.ten miles long and half an inch wide." |> Joe: "What you gonna raise on it?"Jerk; "I planted spaghetti on It." • nr’UTiXE A pH*y->cr yrurrg lleutenjtnl with an «!yf to the. future approached a notoriou?ly grouchy brigadier general at his club in London one day."Good morning. • General," he saJMtrd <ngr.illallngly.••Crumpff/' responded Iho Gen- er«l. ;vi.ovely rtny. isn’t It?" ••r»cnor.il. I trust you will ,par- flon me for speaking ol siich a porsniinl matter, but I read ip the pacers lb«l you buried your wife vcs'crday./and T want to extend my hea-J/pU sympathy.'’! The general adjusted his monocle and .s'ar«d at the young man for .•» irmmcpt. .. . . !"Oh. yes—yes," he replied. "1 iny wife . . . Hsdj to—dead, y’Unow.’’ Alter ^nday morning services In .rfir-ston. church, a woman i^tayed ciial;^lth a-friend, leaving her. ie' on- the seat. When she re­fer her purse, it was gone, slie quickly found it In tbe pos- -*cn of the clergyman himself.thought I had^>#^r hold It," ^•«i:d. “You must fettaember that ..4‘1-e are sotne In tj>e‘ congrega- .ion so simple that they might con- . slder it .an answer to prayer/' VrrAL STATISTICS { Wifey was a buxom little num- . ber—she loved good food—and took ‘ considerable needling from her •: husband about her weight. The two were together one day when they happened upon a scale outside a drugstore—the scale was one of those with a chart that shows Ideal ^eights according to height. "I dare you to get on that scale and prove you’re not overweight,". chaUenged the husband. Surprisingly, wifey climbed on.• looked at the pointer, then to the chart. "Well, what does It say?" hubby demanded. "It says I should be three inches - taller," replied his wife trium- • phantly. NO SMALL TALK NO WBIRLAWAY OOPS! Two casual golf acquaint­ances were walking toward the green when they sighted two women coming over a. hill."I say," remark^ one of the men, "here comes my wife with some old hag she's picked up somewhere.’’••And here comes mine with another," retorted* the other. Idly. , An editor tells the story of an old mountaineer who had three ,great interests — the merit of "cbarred-ln-the-keg" corn whiskey. !the nearby city of Knoxville Tenn., and the Bepubllcan Party.. One day at dusk a traveler, in line with mountain custom, asked to spend the night. He was wel­comed. suppe** was served, and when the meal was over, he and J his so-far courtly host took seats on Ibe front porch and got ready to talk.In only a few minutes, the griz­zled mountaineer discovered these facts: His guest didn't drink, he'd never been to Knoxville and he was a Democrat.The old fellow rocked lor a mo> ‘ ment hi glum silence, then he turned to the door.and called to his wife: "Fix the beds, Ma— we've done talked out." No Warranty Jimmy Faircloth was explaining to a farmer whose barn had Just buriied: "The company will re­build the bam, making it the same size, etc., as the old one instead of paying the claim In cash." The farmer was furious, and replied: "If that's the way you do business you can cancel tbe insurance on my wife." After a hectic search for a third baseman, a baseball manager in desperation signed up a horse who showed up well in fielding and batting practice sessions.In his first game, the horse had the misfortune ot coming to bat in the last half of the ninth with his team trailing and with tlie tying run on second base. The pitchcr’s* first toss was smack over the plate and the horse whammed it over the fence for a homo run. The tying run came in from second but when the horse got to first he was so winded that he sat^n t}ie bag and puffed to regain his breath.In a flash, the manager stormed from the dugout screaming, "Run, you idiot, run.""Run?" gasped the horse. "That's why Pm' playing baseball. If i could run. Pd be out at the fairgrounds race track." A fine wav to remember vour friends a n d relatives t h is Christmas is to send ch.cm T h e Davie Record. A weekly letter fro m the old home countv at a cost or onlv $1.50 per year in this Slate. Outside State, $2. Send m vour gift subscrip* rions today. Our County And Social Security Bv W . K . W hite.-AlanaEer. Over three-fourths of employed people are now building credits for themselves under o1d^age*Iand survlvora insurance. These cred* irsa.e not given to them, '^ e y are c^ e d and paid for. |____ •Therefore, since these workch have an increasing financial stake in thh' contributarv system, they should«take some responsibility seeing to it that their vrages correct A ll workers should take care of rheir social security car<^. This is the key to their account and becomes more valuable as as time uoes on. "Use ic—don't lose it!" i Women who work have an adv ditional responsibility. When they change their name thev should report this at once to their nearesfr field office. Th is is important to assure that their record with so­ cial securitv is kept straight. Oth­ erwise, one social security num> bet with two names causes com plications. < Workets should be sure to show their social security card to their employer when starting work, so that the correct number ' is used. One incorrect digit w ill, psevenc proper crediting of wages to a wor­ ker's account. They should also be sure that the correct spelling of their name is used by the em­ ployer. W hile these precautions should be taken by ajl workers covered by social s.cu rity; it is es- pcclallyltrue for those who came under the newly amended law for the first time on January 1, 1951. In clu d e in this group are some household and farm workers, and certain employees of government (Federal. Seate and local) and non profit organizations, lin addition all th se people should chcck on tlieir accounts uccu>*.onjllv t o make sure their earnings are pro­ perly lecorded. Post' cards 'for this purpose are available at all field offices of the Bu^au of Old Age and Survivors Insurance. A repreesntative or office this w ill be in M ocksville -again on Dec. 10th, at the court house, second floor, at 12:30 p. m ., and on the s^me date- in .Gooleeriiee, at the old Band Hail,Vover Led­ ford's Store, at 11 a) m. Seen Along Main Street By The Street Rambler. ' onootio M r. and M rs. O . L . Harkev and daughter doing some rainy m e t­ ing shoppit^g-^Herbert Eldson sit­ ting in barber chair getting morn­ ing hair cu t-M rs. W illiam Le- Grand doing some morning shop- plng--i. M . Hom short one hat at hands of Shcck Bowden, fol­ lowing the arrival of a grand-dau­ ghter—M rs. Joe Patner.domg her week-end shopping In Mocksville's leading giocery and market—Lady troln New York buving candy in dime store—Roy Brown and John Durham holding morning caucus —Charlie Bailey taken rainy day off to recuperate from strenuous farm operations—M rs. Roy Har­ ris declaring that she had finished her Christmas shopping—D r. Hen­ ry S. Anderson waiting around ton&oral parlor for hair cut—Salis­ bury ladies doing Christmas shop­ ping in nickel and dime store— Mrs, C . J. W ilson and small son looking over Christmas to ys-C . F. Meroney. Jr., getting Thanks­ giving hair cut—^Mr. and M rs. Jack Vogler shopping around the own on cloudy afternoon-J. R . rloward rambling around town baking hands with fnends—D . K . 'urehes waitlitg around bus stat­ ion for his daughter to arrive— Munsey Dyson discussing high fertilizer and low beef prices—M r. and M n. Haywood Powell and son getting ready to leave town— Judith Ward looking for new half dollars—Lonnie Richardson stan­ ding on street comer watching traflic move up Main street—B ill Ratledge carrying big tray of cold drinks down Main street on cold day—Oscar D river and Clyde Bo- gcr talking things over In front of court house- Claude Hicks and J , S. Haire trying to 'cross M ain . street between heavy traffic—M r. and M rs. C . C . Blackwelder look­ ing for Blum's Almanac—Large crowd of hungry town 'and coun­ try folks enjoying free lu.ich in Allison-Johnson's new store—Mrsti. Hoy Poston and daughter Mibs/-'. Ann, doing some pre-holiday shop­ ping—lune Greene.on her way down Main street-Boyce Cain buying week-end bread—Joe Fere- bee waiting around bus station to meet son—M rs. Reid Towell buy-* ing box of Hollingsworth candv— Hverette Koontz and Ed Lagle dis­ cussing recent events-M iss Ger­ trude Sherrill waiting at bus sta. tion for west-bound b u s-M r. and M rs. Ted Junker and young son doing some late afternoon shop­ ping—Young lady running down Main street at break-neck speed trying to meet a four o'clock ap­ pointment at dental office—Chap Powell rambling around town ea ly Monoay morning’-Roy Col­ lette caking time off on busy day to get a shampoo. ?-rhe Gift C H R IS T IN E W . D A N IEL ' /......